Amazon to cut 14,000 corporate jobs
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10hon MSN
"No hire, no fire" job market may no longer be a thing as big companies announce mass layoffs
Amazon and UPS on Tuesday announced tens of thousands of job cuts, the latest signal that the U.S. labor market is downshifting.
12hon MSN
Layoffs are piling up, raising worker anxiety. Here are some companies that have cut jobs recently
It's a tough time for the job market. Amid wider economic uncertainty, some analysts have said that businesses are at a “no-hire, no fire” standstill.
Delivery company United Parcel Service reported higher-than-expected earnings but bigger job cuts in its business turnaround goals.
Incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke leads Target's restructuring effort to reduce complexity and speed decision-making, cutting 8% of global headquarters team positions.
City of London veteran Quentin Nason says Gen Z should "think big" and turn to entrepreneurship as AI and automation shrink entry-level career paths.
Amazon cuts thousands of jobs due to over hiring during the pandemic. Lululemon teams up with the NFL in their first apparel collaboration, and Airbnb enforcing a no-party policy in time for Halloween.
This is a stock, as I've been saying this morning, one more of these stocks that severely underperformed the benchmark index over the last five years and year to date is is cutting 34,000 jobs enough to turn that around?
UPS cut about 34,000 positions this year, the company said in its third-quarter earnings report. It had said it planned to cut 20,000 jobs.