ក្រុមហ៊ុន Microsoft ទើបតែបានប្រកាសពីការបញ្ឈប់ការងារដ៏ធំ

សាជីវកម្ម Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), on Wednesday, announced plans of significantly lowering its global headcount to prepare for an imminent slowdown in revenue growth.

How many of its employees are at risk?

The layoff that it plans on executing through March 31st will affect roughly 10,000 of its employees and will result in a $1.20 billion charge. In a អនុស្សរណៈ to employees, CEO Satya Nadella said:


តើអ្នកកំពុងស្វែងរកព័ត៌មានរហ័សព័ត៌មានជំនួយក្តៅនិងការវិភាគទីផ្សារមែនទេ?

ចុះឈ្មោះសម្រាប់ព្រឹត្តិប័ត្រ Invezz ថ្ងៃនេះ។

We’re now seeing customers optimise their digital spend to do more with less. We’re also seeing organisations in every industry and geography exercise caution as some parts of the world are in a recession and other are anticipating one.

For its current financial quarter, the multinational tech behemoth is calling for a 2.0% annualised growth in revenue – the slowest rate in about seven years.  

ភាគហ៊ុនរបស់ Microsoft is currently down more than 15% since its high in mid-August. Last week, Invezz រាយការណ៍ the Nasdaq-listed firm to be interested in spending another $10 billion on ChatGPT parent OpenAI.

Should you buy Microsoft stock now?

The layoff announced this morning is remarkably bigger than a less than 1.0% cut it executed in July of 2022. Microsoft had let go of another several hundred employees in October as well. CEO Nadella added:

I’m confident Microsoft will emerge from this stronger and more competitive. But it requires [that we] align our cost structure with our revenue, invest in strategic areas for our future, and act transparently.

The said job cut represents less than 5.0% of the company’s current workforce.

Earlier this year, Guggenheim analyst John DiFucci បន្ទាប Microsoft stock to “sell” and announced a $212 price target that represents a more than 10% downside from here. He’s concerned that the tech titan isn’t as immune to a recession as many believe.

Source: https://invezz.com/news/2023/01/18/microsoft-announce-massive-layoff/