Current:Home > ContactCisco Systems to lay off more than 4,000 workers in latest sign of tighter times in tech -MoneyMatrix
Cisco Systems to lay off more than 4,000 workers in latest sign of tighter times in tech
View
Date:2025-04-18 20:05:22
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Internet networking pioneer Cisco Systems is jettisoning more than 4,000 employees, joining the parade of technology companies in a trend that has helped boost their profits and stock prices while providing a sobering reminder of the job insecurity hanging over an industry increasingly embracing artificial intelligence.
The mass layoffs announced Wednesday in conjunction with Cisco’s latest quarterly results represent about 5% of its worldwide workforce of 84,900. The purge follows Cisco’s late 2022 cutbacks that shed 5,000 workers and ahead of its $28 billion acquisition of Splunk, a deal that management now expects to complete by April 30. Cisco — a company best known for making much of the technology that connects the internet — expects its reorganization to cost an additional $800 million.
The double whammy of two big layoffs in two years has been a phenomenon affecting other prominent technology companies, such as Google and Amazon, both of which have trimmed their once-steadily growing payrolls multiple times since the end of 2022.
The reductions are being made even though most of the companies are still big moneymakers. Cisco, which is based in San Jose, California, earned $2.6 billion, or 65 cents per share, during its fiscal second quarter covering October-January, a 5% decrease from the same time during the previous year. Revenue for the period fell 6% from the prior year to $12.8 billion.
But Cisco foresees sluggish demand for its products and software services during the next three to six months while its customers exercise “a greater degree of caution” amid an uncertain economic outlook, CEO Chuck Robbins said Wednesday during a conference call with analysts.
Cisco’s streamlining follows a succession of significant layoffs since the beginning of the year at Microsoft, TikTok, Riot Games, eBay and PayPal, in addition to both Google and Alphabet. Combined with a wave of layoffs last year, the workforce reductions have helped the companies lift their already lofty profits even higher — a goal that has also elevated their collective market values.
Since the end of 2022, the tech-driven Nasdaq composite index has soared by about 50% in a rally that has put it back within reach of its all-time high hit in 2021 when pandemic-driven lockdowns shifted more of the economy to online services.
But Cisco’s stock price has gained just 6% during the same period, a factor that might have played into management’s decision to make even deeper payroll cuts than some of the company’s tech brethren. And most of that paltry gain now appears poised to evaporate, with Cisco’s shares shedding more than 5% in Wednesday’s extended trading after its latest quarterly numbers and lackluster forecast came out.
Like its peers, Cisco is also sharpening its focus on areas of tech most likely to produce future growth — an adjustment prompting many tech companies to eliminate positions in some departments, while creating more jobs in the still-nascent field of artificial intelligence, or AI, which is becoming knowledgeable enough to begin tackling tasks that traditionally required a human brain.
Experts expect AI to eventually be able to do even more work and trigger more layoffs of people who won’t be necessary to employ in the future.
Robbins hailed Cisco’s close relationship with chipmaker Nvidia, whose leadership in AI has transformed it into one of the world’s most valuable companies during the past year, as a sign that it will also be well positioned to capitalize on the technology, too.
“We are clear beneficiaries of AI adoption,” Robbins said.
veryGood! (371)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Meet Matt Kaplan: All the Details on the Man Alex Cooper Is Calling Her Fiancé
- Dancing With the Stars' Len Goodman Predicted His Death 4 Months Before His Passing
- Extreme heat will smother the South from Arizona to Florida
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- The Hunger Games' Alexander Ludwig Celebrates 5 Years of Sobriety in Moving Self-Love Message
- The Young and the Restless' Eric Braeden Reveals Cancer Diagnosis
- Why hurricanes feel like they're getting more frequent
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Why some Indonesians worry about a $20 billion international deal to get off coal
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Scarlett Johansson Makes Rare Comment About Ex-Husband Ryan Reynolds
- NFL Star Aaron Rodgers Leaving Green Bay Packers for New York Jets
- We Can't Calm Down After Seeing Taylor Swift's Night Out With Gigi Hadid, Blake Lively and HAIM
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Efforts to recharge California's underground aquifers show mixed results
- The latest to be evacuated from California's floods? Bunnies
- Dangerous heat waves will hit the Southwest and Florida over the next week
Recommendation
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Meghan Markle Responds to Report About Alleged Letter to King Charles III
Global heat waves show climate change and El Niño are a bad combo
A skinny robot documents the forces eroding a massive Antarctic glacier
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
What — And Who — Is To Blame For Extreme Heat?
News Round Up: algal threats, an asteroid with life's building blocks and bee maps
Greta Thunberg was detained by German police while protesting a coal mine expansion