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AT&T's ax: Job cuts spin up to historical levels
- The latest quarter at AT&T also brought what looks like the most
aggressive round of layoffs since its $85B embrace of Time Warner, part
of a push to save $6B as it looks to slim down a swollen balance sheet.
- Nearly 9,000 jobs appear to have vanished since last quarter - about
4% of the total - and that's before AT&T announced this month that
thousands
more jobs were coming out of WarnerMedia, which is looking to slash
costs by 20%.
- The two companies together had employed about 281,450 people in 2015,
and the number at AT&T is now 234,630 - lighter by about 47,000 jobs,
about
17% of the 2015 total - a cull that looks unprecedented for telecom,
LightReading notes.
- It's part of a plan to save about $6B by 2023, including cutting $1.5B
from labor expenses. That would have meant about 10,000 total cuts if
spread evenly, but the total already looks to go much higher.
- At least for the just-reported quarter, operating expenses fell by
$479M, just 1.3% of the total, while revenues slumped by 5% to $42.3B
(still better than expected).
- AT&T's not along among telecoms, LightReading points out. Verizon
(NYSE:VZ) has cut nearly 43,000 jobs since 2015, it says, and even
T-Mobile (NASDAQ:TMUS) appears to be laying off workers despite comments
(during its hunt to merge with Sprint) that it expected to add roles to
the
combined company. Deutsche Telekom (OTCQX:DTEGY), Telefónica (NYSE:TEF)
and Vodafone (NASDAQ:VOD) have cut thousands as well.
- It's all coming amid a pandemic that is spurring many customers to
shop online, giving the telecoms backing to initiate more store closures.
|Today, 6:31 PM|111 Comments
AT&T's ax: Job cuts spin up to historical levels
- The latest quarter at AT&T also brought what looks like the most
aggressive round of layoffs since its $85B embrace of Time Warner, part
of a push to save $6B as it looks to slim down a swollen balance sheet.
- Nearly 9,000 jobs appear to have vanished since last quarter - about
4% of the total - and that's before AT&T announced this month that
thousands
more jobs were coming out of WarnerMedia, which is looking to slash
costs by 20%.
- The two companies together had employed about 281,450 people in 2015,
and the number at AT&T is now 234,630 - lighter by about 47,000 jobs,
about
17% of the 2015 total - a cull that looks unprecedented for telecom,
LightReading notes.
- It's part of a plan to save about $6B by 2023, including cutting $1.5B
from labor expenses. That would have meant about 10,000 total cuts if
spread evenly, but the total already looks to go much higher.
- At least for the just-reported quarter, operating expenses fell by
$479M, just 1.3% of the total, while revenues slumped by 5% to $42.3B
(still better than expected).
- AT&T's not along among telecoms, LightReading points out. Verizon
(NYSE:VZ) has cut nearly 43,000 jobs since 2015, it says, and even
T-Mobile (NASDAQ:TMUS) appears to be laying off workers despite comments
(during its hunt to merge with Sprint) that it expected to add roles to
the
combined company. Deutsche Telekom (OTCQX:DTEGY), Telefónica (NYSE:TEF)
and Vodafone (NASDAQ:VOD) have cut thousands as well.
- It's all coming amid a pandemic that is spurring many customers to
shop online, giving the telecoms backing to initiate more store closures.
|Today, 6:31 PM|111 Comments
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