The
cuts, earlier reported by the New York Times, would represent
about 3% of Amazon's corporate staff. The exact number may vary
as businesses within Amazon review their priorities, the source
told Reuters.
The online retailer plans to eliminate jobs in its devices
organization, which makes voice-controlled "Alexa" gadgets and
home-security cameras, as well as in its human-resources and
retail divisions, the person said. Amazon's time frame for
informing staff remained unclear.
The source attributed the reduction to the uncertain
macroeconomic environment faced by Amazon and other companies.
The news follows a wave of layoffs across the technology sector,
which is wary of recession after years of rapid hiring. Just
last week, Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc said it would cut
more than 11,000 jobs, or 13% of its workforce, to rein in
costs.
Seattle-based Amazon is predicting a slowdown in sales growth
for the typically lucrative holiday season.
On a call with reporters last month, Chief Financial Officer
Brian Olsavsky said the company saw signs of tighter household
budgets for shopping, and it continued to wrestle with high
inflation and energy costs.
It since has said it would freeze incremental corporate hiring
for several months.
Amazon's devices unit in some recent years has posted an annual
operating loss of more than $5 billion, the Wall Street Journal
reported last week. The company has weighed whether to focus on
new capabilities for Alexa when some customers use the voice
assistant for just a few tasks, the report said.
Company-wide, taking warehouse and transportation jobs into
account, which made Amazon's headcount more than 1.5 million as
of Sept. 30, the planned cuts amounted to less than 1% of the
retailer's workforce.
Shares of Amazon have lost more than 40% of their value this
year. They were down 1.1% at $99.67 on Monday afternoon.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in Palo Alto, Calif., and Tiyashi
Datta and Nivedita Balu in BengaluruEditing by Arun Koyyur and
Matthew Lewis)
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