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The list of major companies laying off staff this year includes Oracle, Nextdoor, Intel, Scale AI, and more

Peloton logo outside its New York City studios while woman walks by holding umbrella
Peloton said in August that it is making further cuts to its head count this year.

John Smith/VIEWpress

  • Companies such as Peloton, Intel, Meta, Microsoft, BlackRock, and UPS have trimmed staff this year.
  • In some cases, artificial intelligence is reshaping workforces.
  • See the list of companies letting workers go in 2025.

The list of companies laying off employees this year is growing.

Layoffs and other workforce reductions have continued in 2025, following two years of significant job cuts in tech, media, finance, manufacturing, retail, and energy.

While the reasons for slimming staff vary, the cost-cutting measures are coming amid technological change. A World Economic Forum survey found that some 41% of companies worldwide expect to reduce their workforces over the next five years because of the rise of artificial intelligence.

Companies such as Oracle, CNN, Dropbox, and Block have previously announced job cuts related to AI. Though Amazon has not announced job cuts this year, CEO Andy Jassy told employees in June that the company will need "fewer people doing some of the jobsΒ that are being done today" in the coming years as it expands its use of generative AI and agents.

Meanwhile, tech jobs in big data, fintech, and AI are expected to double by 2030, according to the WEF.

Here are the companies with job cuts planned or already underway in 2025 so far, in alphabetical order.

Adidas plans to cut up to 500 jobs in Germany.
Adidas shoes are seen in the store in Hoofddorp, Netherlands.
Despite a strong year, Adidas is planning job cuts.

Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Adidas said in January that it would reduce the size of its workforce at its headquarters in Herzogenaurach, Germany, affecting up to 500 jobs, CNBC reported.

If fully executed, it amounts to a reduction of nearly 9% at the company headquarters, which employs about 5,800 employees, according to the Adidas website.

The news came shortly after the company announced it had outperformed its profit expectations at the end of 2024, touting "better-than-expected" results in the fourth quarter.

An Adidas spokesperson said the company had grown "too complex because of our current operating model."

"To set adidas up for long-term success, we are now starting to look at how we align our operating model with the reality of how we work. This may have an impact on the organizational structure and number of roles based at our HQ in Herzogenaurach."

The company said it is not a cost-cutting measure and could not confirm concrete numbers.

Ally is cutting less than 5% of workers.
Hands typing on a laptop with the Ally website on its screen.

Ally Bank/Facebook

The digital-financial-services company Ally is laying off roughly 500 of its 11,000 employees, a spokesperson confirmed to BI.

"As we continue to right-size our company, we made the difficult decision to selectively reduce our workforce in some areas, while continuing to hire in our other areas of our business," the spokesperson said.

The spokesperson also said the company was offering severance, outplacement support, and the opportunity to apply for openings at Ally.

Ally made a similar level of cuts in October 2023, the Charlotte Observer reported.

Automattic, Tumblr's parent, cuts 16% of staff
Logo of Tumblr.

Thiago Prudencio/SOPA/LightRocket/Getty Images

Automattic, the parent company of Tumblr and WordPress, said in April it is cutting 16% of its staff globally. The company's website said it has nearly 1,500 employees.

Automattic's CEO, Matt Mullenweg, said in a note to employees posted online that the company has reached an "important crossroads."

"While our revenue continues to grow, Automattic operates in a highly competitive market, and technology is evolving at unprecedented levels," the note read.

The company is restructuring to improve its "productivity, profitability, and capacity to invest," it added.

The company said it was offering severance and job placement resources to affected employees.

BlackRock is cutting 1% of its workforce.
A black-and-white photo of the BlackRock logo on a building, viewed from below.

Eric Thayer/Reuters

BlackRock told employees it was planning to cut about 200 people of its 21,000-strong workforce, Bloomberg reported in January.

The reductions were more than offset by some 3,750 workers who were added last year and another 2,000 expected to be added in 2025.

BlackRock's president, Rob Kapito, and its chief operating officer, Rob Goldstein, said the cuts would help realign the firm's resources with its strategy, Bloomberg reported.

Block to lay off nearly 1,000 workers
Smartphone with Square logo is seen in front of displayed Afterpay logo

REUTERS/Dado Ruvi

Jack Dorsey's fintech company, Block, is laying off nearly 1,000 employees, according to TechCrunch and The Guardian, in its second major workforce reduction in just over a year.

The company, which operates Square, Afterpay, CashApp, and Tidal, is transitioning nearly 200 managers into non-management roles and closing almost 800 open positions, according to an email obtained by TechCrunch.

Dorsey, who co-founded Block in 2009 after previously leading Twitter, announced the layoffs in March in an internal email titled "smaller block."

The restructuring is part of a broader effort to streamline operations, though Block maintains the changes are not driven by financial targets or AI replacements.

Bloomberg is making cuts in an overhaul of its newsroom
Bloomberg LP NYC office exterior

Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

Bloomberg is cutting some editorial staff as the company reorganizes its newsroom, according to a memo viewed by BI. The larger strategy aims to have a larger headcount by the end of this year, however.

The newsroom currently employs around 2,700 people, and the changes will merge some smaller teams into larger units, the memo said.

Blue Origin is laying off one-tenth of its workforce
Blue Origin

Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Jeff Bezos's rocket company, Blue Origin, is laying off about 10% of its workforce, a move that could affect more than 1,000 employees.

In a memo sent to staff in February and obtained by Business Insider, David Limp, the CEO of Blue Origin, said the company's priority going forward was "to scale our manufacturing output and launch cadence with speed, decisiveness and efficiency for our customers."

Limp specifically identified roles in engineering, research and development, and management as targets.

"We grew and hired incredibly fast in the last few years, and with that growth came more bureaucracy and less focus than we needed," Limp wrote. "It also became clear that the makeup of our organization must change to ensure our roles are best aligned with executing these priorities."

The news comes after January's debut launch of the company's partially reusable rocket β€” New Glenn.

Boeing cut 400 roles from its moon rocket program
Boeing Employees Renton Washington

Stephen Brashear/Getty Images

Boeing announced on February 8 that it plans to cut 400 roles from its moon rocket program amid delays and rising costs related to NASA's Artemis moon exploration missions.

Artemis 2, a crewed flight to orbit the moon on Boeing's space launch system, has been rescheduled from late 2024 to September 2025. Artemis 3, intended to be the first astronaut moon landing in the program, was delayed from late 2025 and is now planned for September 2026.

"To align with revisions to the Artemis program and cost expectations, we informed our Space Launch Systems team of the potential for approximately 400 fewer positions by April 2025," a Boeing spokesperson told Business Insider. "We are working with our customer and seeking opportunities to redeploy employees across our company to minimize job losses and retain our talented teammates."

The company will issue 60-day notices of involuntary layoff to impacted employees "in coming weeks," the spokesperson said.

Boeing cut 10% of its workforce last year.

BP slashed 7,700 staff and contractor positions worldwide
A BP logo on a gas station sign.

John Keeble/Getty Images

BP told Business Insider in January that it planned to cut 4,700 staff and 3,000 contractors, amounting to about 5% of its global workforce.

The cuts were part of a program to "simplify and focus" BP that began last year.

"We are strengthening our competitiveness and building in resilience as we lower our costs, drive performance improvement and play to our distinctive capabilities," the company said.

Bridgewater cut about 90 staff
An office in a forested area with a glass bridge connecting buildings.
Outside Bridgewater Associates' Westport, Connecticut headquarters.

Bridgewater Associates

Bridgewater Associates cut 7% of its staff in January in an effort to stay lean, a person familiar with the matter told Business Insider.

The layoffs at the world's largest hedge fund bring its head count back to where it was in 2023, the person said.

The company's founder,Β Ray Dalio,Β said in a 2019 interview that about 30% of new employees were leaving the firm within 18 months.

Bumble said it intends to cut 30% of its workforce.
whitney wolfe herd bumble ceo founder
Founder and CEO of Bumble Whitney Wolfe attends Bumble Presents: Empowering Connections at Fair Market on March 9, 2018 in Austin, Texas.

Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for Bumble

In a June 23 securities filing, Bumble said it plans to slash 240 roles, about 30% of its workforce. The dating app company said the cuts will result in charges between $13 million and $18 million in its third and fourth quarters.

"We recently made some difficult decisions to adjust our team structure in order to align with our strategic priorities," a Bumble spokesperson said.

They told BI that the decision to lay off over 200 employees wasn't "made lightly."

Burberry says it plans on cutting 1,700 jobs
Burberry logo and flag

Pietro Recchia/SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images

Burberry announced 1,700 job cuts in May, or about 18% of its global workforce, as part of plans to cut costs by about Β£100 million ($130 million) by 2027.

It plans to end night shifts at its Yorkshire raincoat factory due to production over-capacity.

The British company sunk to an operating loss of Β£3 million for the year to the end of March, compared with a Β£418 million profit for the previous 12 months.

Chevron is slashing up to 20% of its global head count
The Chevron logo is displayed at a Chevron gas station.
The Chevron logo is displayed at a Chevron gas station.

PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images

Oil giant Chevron plans to cull 15% to 20% of its global workforce by the end of 2026, the company said in a statement to Business Insider in February.

Chevron employed 45,600 people as of December 2023, which means the layoff could cut 9,000 jobs.

The move aims to reduce costs and simplify the company's business as it completes its acquisition of oil producer Hess, which is held up in legal limbo. It is expected to save the company $2 billion to $3 billion by the end of 2026, the company said.

"Chevron is taking action to simplify our organizational structure, execute faster and more effectively, and position the company for stronger long-term competitiveness," a Chevron spokesperson said in a statement.

The cuts follow a series of layoffs at other oil and gas companies, including BP and natural gas producer EQT.

CNN plans to cut 200 jobs
CNN's world headquarters in Atlanta.
CNN is cutting staff in a bid to focus the business on its digital news services.

Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Cable news giantΒ CNNΒ cut about 200 television-focused roles as part of a digital pivot. The cuts amounted to about 6% of the company's workforce.

In a memo sent to staff on January 23, CNN's CEO Mark Thompson said he aimed to "shift CNN's gravity towards the platforms and products where the audience themselves are shifting and, by doing that, to secure CNN's future as one of the world's greatest news organizations."

Coty is cutting about 700 jobs
OTY logo is seen displayed on a smartphone and in the background.

Illustration by Avishek Das/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Coty, which sells cosmetics and fragrances under brands such as Kylie Cosmetics, Calvin Klein, and Burberry, is cutting about 700 jobs.

The company said on April 24 it aimed to cut costs by $130 million a year. Sue Nabi, the CEO, said it aimed to build a "stronger, more resilient Coty that is well-positioned for sustainable growth."

CrowdStrike is cutting about 500 jobs
Crowdstrike logo on a phone screen
The IT outage was triggered by a defect in an update issued by Crowdstrike.

Jonathan Raa/NurPhoto/Getty Images

CrowdStrike, the Texas-headquartered cybersecurity firm, is cutting about 500 jobs, or 5% of its global workforce, as part of a strategic plan to "yield greater efficiencies."

It expects the layoffs to cost between $36 million and $53 million.

CrowdStrike is aiming to generate $10 billion in annual recurring revenue.

The company reported worse-than-expected annual results in March, signaling that it was yet to fully recover from a widespread tech outage linked to CrowdStrike in July 2024.

Disney says it's laying off several hundred employees
Disney logo is seen on the store in Rome, Italy on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Disney is carrying out its fourth layoff in the past year.

Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Disney confirmed to BI on June 2 that it was laying off several hundred employees globally.

Most of the cuts were to roles in marketing for films and TV under the Disney Entertainment division. Other roles affected included employees in publicity, casting, and development, as well as corporate finance.

In March, the company also cut around 200 people from its ABC News Group and Disney Entertainment Networks. In 2024, the company also had several rounds of layoffs.

Shortly after Bob Iger returned to the company as CEO in 2022, he said 7,000 jobs at Disney would be cut as part of a reorganization.

EstΓ©e Lauder will cut as many as 7,000 jobs
estee lauder
American multinational skincare, and beauty products brand, EstΓ©e Lauder logo seen in Hong Kong.

Budrul Chukrut/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Cosmetics giant EstΓ©e Lauder said in its second-quarter earnings release on February 4 that it will cut between 5,800 and 7,000 jobs as the company restructures over the next two years.

The cuts will focus on "rightsizing" certain teams, and it will look to outsource certain services. The company says it expects annual gross benefits of between $0.8 billion and $1.0 billion before tax.

Geico has axed tens of thousands of workers
geico

Geico

Berkshire Hathaway Vice Chair of Insurance Operations Ajit Jain says Geico has reduced its workforce from about 50,000 to about 20,000. Jain revealed the reductions during Berkshire Hathaway's annual meeting on May 3 but did not detail over what time frame they took place. Berkshire Hathaway is one of Geico's parent companies.

Warren Buffett's company reported its 2025 first-quarter earnings on during the May 3 meeting, saying Geico earned nearly $2.2 billion in pre-tax underwriting.

GrubHub announced 500 job cuts
A Grubhub delivery person rides in Manhattan.
GrubHub said it is focusing on aligning its business with Wonder after the takeover was completed last month.

Andrew Kelly/REUTERS

Grubhub CEO Howard Migdal announced 500 job cuts on February 28 after selling the company to Wonder Group for $650 million.

With more than 2,200 full time employees, the number of cuts will affect more than 20% of Grubhub's previous workforce.

According to Reuters, Just Eat Takeaway, an Amsterdam-listed company, sold Grubhub at a steep loss compared to the billions it paid a few years prior after grappling with slowing growth and high taxes.

HPE is laying off 2,500 employees
A man with grey hair wears a blue collared shirt and dark blue shirt. He gestures as he speaks while sitting on a stage in front of a large blue screen.
US company Hewlett Packard Enterprise President and Chief Officer Executive Antonio Neri gives a conference at the Mobile World Congress (MWC), the telecom industry's biggest annual gathering, in Barcelona on February 27, 2024.

PAU BARRENA / AFP

Hewlett Packard Enterprise is cutting 2,500 jobs, or 5% of its employee base, CEO Antonio Neri said on an earnings call on March 6. The cuts are expected take to take place over the next 12 to 18 months.

"Doing so will better align our cost structure to our business mix and long-term strategy," Neri said. The company expects to save $350 million by 2027 because of the reduction.

HPE plummeted about 20% after hours on March 6 after it said business would be affected by recent tariffs, slow server and cloud sales, and "execution issues."

Intel to cut at least 15% of its factory workers
The Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California
The Intel headquarters in Santa Clara, California

Bloomberg/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Chipmaker Intel is laying off more than 5,000 employees across four US states, according to a July 16 government filing.

Most of the cuts are happening in California and Oregon, while others are in Texas and Arizona, per updated Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification, or WARN, filings.

Intel began laying off employees in July as part of planned job cuts, the company said in a regulatory filing.

The company told staff on June 14 to expect 15% to 20% of employees in its Foundry division to be laid off this summer, according to a memo reported by The Oregonian. Intel confirmed the authenticity of the memo to BI but declined to comment on its contents.

As of December 2024, Intel employed about 108,900 people. In its annual report, the company told investors that it would reduce its "core Intel workforce" by about 15% in early 2025.

"Removing organizational complexity and empowering our engineers will enable us to better serve the needs of our customers and strengthen our execution," an Intel spokesperson told BI.

Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins Hospital
Johns Hopkins Hospital.

Courtesy of Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins University will cut over 2,000 jobs after losing $800 million in funding from USAID.

"This is a difficult day for our entire community," a spokesperson told BI. "The termination of more than $800 million in USAID funding is now forcing us to wind down critical work here in Baltimore and internationally."

The news comes after the Trump administration slashed USAID personnel down from over 10,000 to around 300. Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently confirmed that 83% of the agency's programs are now dead.

"We can confirm that the elimination of foreign aid funding has led to the loss of 1,975 positions in 44 countries internationally and 247 in the United States in the affected programs," the Johns Hopkins spokesperson said. "An additional 29 international and 78 domestic employees will be furloughed with a reduced schedule."

The layoffs at Johns Hopkins represent the "largest" in the university's history, CNN reported. They'll primarily affect the schools of medicine and public health, along with the Center for Communication Programs and Jhpiego, a nonprofit with a focus on preventing diseases and bolstering women's health, according to the report.

Kohl's is reducing about 10% of its roles
A Kohl's department store in Miami.
A Kohl's department store in Miami.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Department store Kohl's announced on January 28 that it reduced about 10% of its corporate roles to "increase efficiencies" and "improve profitability for the long-term health and benefit of the business," a spokesperson told BI.

"Kohl's reduced approximately 10 percent of the roles that report into its corporate offices," the spokesperson said. "More than half of the total reduction will come from closing open positions while the remainder of the positions were currently held by our associates."

Less than 200 existing employees of the company would be impacted, she added.

This follows the company's announcement on January 9 that it would shutter 27 underperforming stores across 15 states by April.

The retailer has been struggling with declining sales, reporting an 8.8% decline in net sales in the third quarter of 2024.

Its previous CEO, Tom Kingsbury, stepped down on January 15. The company's board appointed Ashley Buchanan, a retail veteran who had held top jobs in The Michaels Companies, Macy's, and Walmart, as the new CEO.

Meta is cutting 5% of its workforce
Meta sign
Meta slashed its DEI team in January.

Fabrice COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg told staff he "decided to raise the bar on performance management" and will act quickly to "move out low-performers," according to an internal memo seen by BI in January.

Those cuts started in February, according to records obtained by BI. Teams overseeing Facebook, the Horizon virtual reality platform, as well as logistics were among the hardest hit.

In April, Meta also laid off an undisclosed number of employees on the Reality Labs virtual reality division.

Previously, the company had laid off more than 21,000 workers since 2022.

Microchip Technology is slashing 2,000 jobs
Semiconductor manufacturing.
Nvidia semiconductor manufacturing.

Krystian Nawrocki/Getty Images

Microchip Technology is cutting its head count across the company by around 2,000 employees, the semiconductor company said on March 3.

The company estimated that it would incur between $30 million and $40 million in costs, including severance, severance benefits, and other restructuring costs.

The cuts would be communicated to employees in the March quarter and fully implemented by the end of the June quarter.

Last year, Microchip announced it was closing its Tempe, Arizona, facility because of slower-than-anticipated orders. The closure begins in May 2025 and is expected to affect 500 jobs.

Microchip's stock had fallen over 33% in the past year.

Microsoft has made several rounds of cuts this year
the Microsoft logo on a building.

NurPhoto/Getty Images

Microsoft cut an unspecified number of jobs in January based on employees' performance.

Workers were told that they wouldn't receive severance and that their benefits, such as medical insurance, would stop immediately, BI reported.

The company also laid off some employees in January at divisions including gaming and sales. A Microsoft spokesperson declined to say how many jobs were cut on the affected teams.

In May, the company announced layoffs affecting about 6,000 workers.

Another round of layoffs in July will affect less than 4% of its total workforce, or roughly 9,000 employees, based on its head count of around 220,000.

Morgan Stanley plans cuts for the end of March
Morgan Stanley

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Morgan Stanley is set to initiate a round of layoffs beginning at the end of March. The firm is eyeing cuts to about 2% to 3% of its global workforce, which would equate to between 1,600 to 2,400 jobs, according to a person familiar with the matter who confirmed the reductions to BI.

The firm's cuts are driven by several imperatives, the person said, pointing to considerations like operational efficiency, evolving business priorities, and individual employees' performance. The person said the cuts are not related to broader market conditions, such as the recent slowdown in mergers and acquisitions that's arrested momentum on Wall Street.

Some MS staffers will be excluded from the cuts, however β€” namely, the bank's battalion of financial advisors β€” though some who assist them, such as administrative personnel in its wealth-management unit, could be affected by the layoffs, the person added.

Nextdoor is slashing 12% of its staff
Nextdoor app

Eric Baradat/AFP/Getty Images

Neighborhood social networking company Nextdoor is cutting 12% of its staff, or 67 jobs, it said on August 7 in its second-quarter earnings report. The move is part of CEO Nirav Tolia's plan to achieve profitability and reorganize the struggling company.

The layoffs are expected to reduce operating expenses by about $30 million, it said in the earnings report.

The company reported a net loss of $15 million, compared to $43 million year-over-year.

Nissan says it will cut 20,000 jobs by 2027
Nissan

Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images

Japanese car giant Nissan is cutting 20,000 jobs by 2027 and reducing the number of factories it operates from 17 to 10 as it struggles with a dire financial situation.

The job losses include the 9,000 layoffs announced late last year, and come as the automaker faces headwinds from US tariffs on imported vehicles and collapsing sales in China.

Nissan reported a net loss of 671 billion yen ($4.5 billion) for the 2024 financial year, and said it would not issue an operating profit forecast for 2025 because of tariff uncertainty.

Oracle is reportedly cutting jobs from its cloud division.
Oracle office in Santa Monica, California
Oracle office in Santa Monica, California

Richard Vogel/AP

Oracle is cutting jobs in its cloud unit, Bloomberg reported. The cuts come as the company works to curb costs amid spending on AI infrastructure.

Sources familiar with the cuts told Bloomberg that some of the cuts were related to performance issues.

Oracle did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Panasonic is cutting 10,000 jobs
panasonic
A man looks at television sets by Japanese firm Panasonic at an electronics retailer in Tokyo June 10, 2015.

REUTERS/Thomas Peter

Panasonic, the Japanese-headquartered multinational electronics manufacturer, plans to cut 10,000 jobs this financial year, which ends in March 2026. The cuts will affect 5,000 roles in Japan and 5,000 overseas.

In a statement on May 9, the company said it planned to "thoroughly review operational efficiency … mainly in sales and indirect departments, and reevaluate the numbers of organisations and personnel actually needed."

"Through these measures, the company will optimize our personnel on a global scale," the statement added.

Paramount is cutting 3.5% of its US workforce
Paramount on building

PATRICK T. FALLON/Getty Images

Paramount told employees it would be laying off 3.5% of US-based staff based in the US, per a memo reported by CNBC on June 10, citing industry-wide declines and a challenging macroeconomic environment.

The move comes after the media company cut 15% of jobs last year to cut costs. Paramount had 18,600 employees at the end of 2024.

It is awaiting regulatory approval of its merger with Skydance Media.

Peloton is looking for $100 million in run-rate savings by next year
FILE PHOTO: A Peloton exercise bike is seen after the ringing of the opening bell for the company's IPO at the Nasdaq Market site in New York City, New York, U.S., September 26, 2019. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
A Peloton exercise bike is seen after the ringing of the opening bell for the company's IPO at the Nasdaq Market site in New York City

Reuters

Peloton said in its August earnings report that it would cut its global headcount as part of an effort to find $100 million in run-rate cost savings by the end of the next fiscal year.

"As of today, we will have actioned about roughly half of the run rate savings through the reductions in our workforce and we expect to achieve the remainder throughout the balance of the year," CFO Elizabeth Coddington told investors on the earnings call.

The company employed about 2,900 people last year, and approximately 6% of the workforce will be affected by the reductions, Reuters reported.

Porsche is cutting 3,900 jobs over the next few years
The Porsche logo on the front trunk lid of a gold 2025 Porsche Taycan GTS EV sedan.
The Porsche logo on the front of a 2025 Porsche Taycan GTS EV.

Benjamin Zhang/Business Insider

Porsche said on March 12 that it plans to cut 3,900 jobs in the coming years.

About 2,000 of the reductions will come with the expiration of fixed-term contractor positions, the German automaker said. The company will make the other 1,900 reductions by 2029 through natural attrition and limiting hiring, it said.

Porsche said it also plans to discuss more potential changes with labor leaders in the second half of the year. "This will also make Porsche even more efficient in the medium and long term," the company said.

PwC is laying off approximately 2% of its US workforce
PwC, or Pricewaterhousecoopers.
PwC office in Washington D.C. in the United States of America, on July 11th, 2024. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto/Getty Images

The Big Four accounting firm said it's cutting roughly 1,500 jobs in the US because its low attrition rates mean not enough people are leaving by choice.

PwC's layoffs began on May 5 and mostly affect the firm's audit and tax lines, a person familiar with the matter told Business Insider.

"This was a difficult decision, and we made it with care, thoughtfulness, and a deep awareness of its impact on our people, appreciating that historically low levels of attrition over consecutive years have made it necessary to take this step," a PwC spokesperson said.

Salesforce is cutting more than 1,000 jobs
The outside of Salesforce Tower with the Salesforce logo, which is shaped like a cloud.

Gary Hershorn / Getty Images

Bloomberg reported in February that Salesforce, a cloud-based customer management software company, will slash more than 1,000 jobs from its nearly 73,000-strong workforce.

Affected employees will be eligible to apply to open internal roles, the outlet reported. The company is hiring salespeople focused on the company's new AI-powered products.

The cuts come despite Salesforce reporting a strong financial performance during its third-quarter earnings in December.

Salesforce did not respond to a request for comment.

Scale AI is cutting 14% of its workforce
Scale AI office
Scale AI is laying off 14% of its full time staff and hundreds of contractors.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

On July 16, Scale AI laid off about 200 full-time employees and 500 contractors, according to the company.

The 200 full-time cuts make up 14% of the data labeling startup's 1,400-person workforce.

The company is restructuring its generative AI group, according to an email from Scale's interim CEO, Jason Droege, obtained by Business Insider.

The cuts follow Meta's $14 billion investment in Scale AI in June as part of a blockbuster deal. The deal included the hiring of Scale's ex-CEO, Alexandr Wang, and the purchase of equity in almost half of the startup.

Sonos cuts about 200 jobs
Sonos

Christoph Dernbach/picture alliance via Getty Images

Sonos, a California-based audio equipment company, said in a February 5 release that it's cutting about 200 roles.

The announcement came nearly a month after Sonos CEO Patrick Spence stepped down following a disastrous app rollout. Interim CEO Tom Conrad said in the statement that the layoffs were part of an effort to create a "simpler organization."

Southwest Airlines
Southwest Airlines Boeing plane at an airport.
A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737.

AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

Southwest Airlines CEO Bob Jordan announced in February that the company is laying off 15% of its corporate staff, or about 1,750 employees.

He said affected workers will keep their pay, benefits, and bonuses through late April, when the separations will take effect.

The company told investors the cuts would save about $210 million this year and $300 million in 2026.

The move comes as Southwest tries to cut costs amid profitability problems. Jordan said this is the first significant layoff the company has had in its 53-year history.

An activist hedge fund took a stake in Southwest in June and has since helped restructure its board and change its business model to keep up with a changing industry. For example, it plans to end its long-standing open-seating policy to generate more seating revenue.

In recent months, the company has also reduced flight crew positions in Atlanta to cut costs.

Starbucks is laying off 1,100 corporate staff
A customer wearing a magenta coat and black earmuffs opens the door and walks into a Starbucks store in New York City.

ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images

Starbucks planned to notify 1,100 corporate employees that they had been laid off on February 25.

CEO Brian Niccol said in a memo that the layoffs will make Starbucks "operate more efficiently, increase accountability, reduce complexity and drive better integration."

The layoffs won't affect employees at Starbucks stores, the company said.

Niccol told employees that layoffs were on the way in a separate memo in January. The company is trying to improve results after sales slid last year.

Stripe laid off 300 employees
The logo for Stripe.
Stripe.

Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Payments platform Stripe laid off 300 employees, primarily in product, engineering, and operations, according to a January 20 memo obtained by BI.

Chief people officer Rob McIntosh said in the memo that the company still planned on growing its head count to about 10,000 employees by the end of the year.

UPS is cutting 20,000 jobs
A UPS Delivery Driver

Vincent Alban/REUTERS

UPS announced on April 29 that it plans to cut 20,000 jobs this year β€” about 4% of its global workforce β€” as part of a shift toward automation and a strategic reduction in business with Amazon.

"With our action, we will emerge as an even stronger, more nimble UPS," the company's CEO, Carol TomΓ©, said in a statement.

The move follows a sharp 16% drop in Amazon package volume in Q4 and is part of a plan to halve its Amazon business by mid-2026. UPS will also close 73 US buildings by June and automate 400 facilities to reduce labor dependency.

The Teamsters union have said they would fight any layoffs affecting its members.

The Washington Post cut 4% of its non-newsroom workforce
The Washington Post building

Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

The Washington Post eliminated fewer than 100 employees in an effort to cut costs, Reuters reported in January.

A spokesperson told the news agency that the cuts wouldn't affect the newsroom: "The Washington Post is continuing its transformation to meet the needs of the industry, build a more sustainable future and reach audiences where they are."

Wayfair laid off 340 tech employees
Wayfair logo on building
Wayfair laid off about 340 tech employees.

Scott Olson/Getty Images

Wayfair announced in an SEC filing on March 7 that it would eliminate its Austin Technology Development Center and lay off around 340 tech workers.

The reorg comes as the technology team has accomplished "significant modernization and replatforming milestones," the company said in the filing. Wayfair said it plans to refocus resources and streamline operations to promote its "next phase of growth."

"With the foundation of this transformation now in place, our technology needs have shifted," the company said.

Wayfair expects to take on $33 to $38 million in costs as a result of the reorganization, consisting of severance, cash employee-related costs, benefits, and transitional costs.

Workday cut more than 8% of its workforce
Workday logo
Workday said it's cutting 8.5% of its workforce and focusing on AI.

Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images

Workday, the human-resources software company, said in February that it is cutting 8.5% of its workforce, or around 1,750 employees. The layoffs came as the company focuses more on artificial intelligence.

In a note to employees, CEO Carl Eschenbach said that Workday will focus on hiring in areas related to artificial intelligence and work to expand its global presence.

"The environment we're operating in today demands a new approach, particularly given our size and scale," Eschenbach wrote. He said that affected employees will get at least 12 weeks of pay.

Is your company conducting layoffs? Got a tip?
A close-up of a person's hands holding and typing on a phone

Tim Robberts/Getty Images

Have a tip? Contact Dominick Reuter via email or text/call/Signal at 646.768.4750. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here's our guide to sharing information securely.

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  •  

Major US alcohol groups are begging Trump to slash tariffs before the holidays to keep them from losing $2 billion in sales

A bottle of Jack Daniels is shown for sale among other brands in the liquor section of a food market in Encinitas, California, U.S., June 6, 2018. Picture taken June 6, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake
A bottle of Jack Daniels is shown for sale among other brands in the liquor section of a food market in Encinitas, California

Thomson Reuters

  • Major US alcohol producers are urging Donald Trump to cut tariffs ahead of the holidays.
  • An alcohol association representing Beam Suntory and Brown-Forman sent a letter to the White House.
  • It warned that the tariffs could result in a $2 billion sales loss and 25,000 American jobs lost.

As the holiday season looms, US liquor groups are begging Trump to kill the tariffs they say could ruin their most lucrative stretch of the year.

A group of 57 associations and guilds called the Toasts not Tariffs Coalition, said in a Wednesday letter to the White House that tariffs could result in a $2 billion sales loss in the holidays.

"We reiterate our urgent request that the U.S. and EU come to an agreement to secure fair and reciprocal trade on spirits and wine," the group wrote in the letter.

"As we approach the critical holiday season, a period that is essential to the success of our industries, we implore you to secure this important deal for the U.S. as soon as possible," it added.

The letter comes as Trump's new tariffs went into effect at midnight on Thursday, with the European Union being slammed with a 15% tariff rate on most goods. However, the EU said on Tuesday said it would pause retaliatory tariffs for six months.

Other countries, such as Switzerland and India, were hit much harder, with tariff rates of 39% and 50%, respectively. India's tariffs are set to go into effect later in August.

In March, Trump also threatened to impose a 200% tariff on wine and other alcohol from the EU.

The coalition said it estimated that a 15% tariff on EU wine and spirits could result in more than 25,000 American job losses and nearly $2 billion in lost sales. Per data from the US Distilled Spirits Council, the US exported $2.4 billion worth of spirits in 2024.

Groups in the Toasts not Tariffs coalition represent US liquor heavyweights like Beam Suntory, the parent of Jim Beam, and Jack Daniel's owner Brown-Forman. The coalition also includes non-liquor bodies like the National Retail Federation and the National Restaurant Association.

The Wednesday letter was the group's second appeal to the White House. It sent a similar letter in January, urging Trump to exclude wine and spirits from his coming tariffs and convince the US's trading partners not to apply retaliatory tariffs on their products.

Kentucky's bourbon makers also appealed to the White House to ease up on tariffs after Canada's boycott of US alcohol in March.

The Kentucky Distillers' Association said in a March statement on X that retaliatory tariffs would have "far-reaching consequences across Kentucky, home to 95% of the world's bourbon."

Representatives for Trump and the Distilled Spirits Council did not respond to requests for comment from BI.

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  •  

The US seized a Russian oligarch's 348-foot, $325 million superyacht — and now it's up for grabs

The yacht Amadea
The Amadea, a megayacht seized from a Russian oligarch, cost nearly $1 million a month to maintain.

Eugene Tanner/AFP via Getty Images

  • The $325 million yacht of Russian oligarch Suleiman Kerimov is now on sale.
  • The six-deck, 348-foot-long superyacht was made in 2017 and seized by the US government in 2022.
  • It will be sold by sealed auction on September 10. Interested buyers must pay a 10 million euro deposit.

A $325 million yacht that belonged to a Russian oligarch is now up for grabs.

The US government is auctioning off the Amadea, a 348-foot-long superyacht seized from sanctioned billionaire Suleiman Kerimov in 2022.

The yacht, built in 2017 by the German shipbuilder LΓΌrssen, can accommodate 16 guests in 8 staterooms and 36 crew members.

The yacht offers numerous amenities on its six decks, including a gym, a 32-foot swimming pool, an outdoor jacuzzi, a private cinema, and a helipad.

"This is perhaps the most spectacular, exacting and beautiful ship any of us will ever see," Bob Toney, chairman of National Maritime Services, said in the auction press release on Tuesday. "An opportunity like this for discerning owners is exceedingly rare β€” maybe once in a lifetime."

The yacht's buyer will be guaranteed a "substantial discount on the original price of the yacht," per information provided by a representative of Fraser Yachts, the luxury yacht broker representing Amadea's sale.

The representative added that the yacht has been "virtually untouched" since it was seized.

The yacht will be sold by sealed bid auction on September 10 to the highest bidder in its berth in San Diego. To be considered for the bid, interested parties must deposit 10 million euros, or $11.6 million.

Per a May 2022 press release by the Department of Justice, the Amadea was seized off the coast of Fiji by the FBI and local law enforcement.

"Last month, I warned that the department had its eyes on every yacht purchased with dirty money," Lisa Monaco, the then-US deputy attorney general, said in the release. "This yacht seizure should tell every corrupt Russian oligarch that they cannot hide β€” not even in the remotest part of the world."

Representatives for the National Maritime Services and Fraser Yachts did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.

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  •  

Stephen Colbert's 'The Late Show' on CBS is getting canceled. Lawmakers want to know if it's because of his political views.

Stephen Colbert said he does not joke about other people's tragedies.
Stephen Colbert's 'The Late Show' on CBS is getting canceled.

Scott Kowalchyk/CBS via Getty Images

  • CBS is canceling its most-watched talk show, "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert."
  • The show, which has been running for more than three decades, will end in May 2026.
  • CBS said the cancellation was "purely a financial decision."

CBS announced on Thursday that "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert" will be canceled after next year, ending a series that has been running for more than three decades.

Colbert announced the talk show's cancellation on Thursday via a clip of his new episode, posted on Instagram.

"Before we start the show, I want to let you know something I found out just last night," he said. "Next year will be our last season. The network will be ending 'The Late Show' in May."

His announcement was followed by a long wave of boos from the audience.

Colbert took over as host of the talk show previously helmed by David Letterman in 2015, and has been running it for the last 10 years. The show was first aired in 1993.

CBS executives said in a statement to The New York Times on Thursday that the cancellation was "purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night."

"It is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount," the statement to the NYT added.

Ratings from the American audience measurement company, Nielsen, seen by several news outlets, show that "The Late Show" performed well in its timeslot. The show notched 2.417 million viewers across 41 new episodes, and was the only late-night show to gain viewers in 2025.

The cancellation comes shortly after Paramount, on July 1, agreed to pay President Donald Trump a $16 million settlement over a lawsuit the president filed against it. The lawsuit accused CBS's "60 Minutes" of "deceptive editing" of his interview with presidential rival Kamala Harris.

Colbert referenced the settlement in an episode on July 14, titled "A Big Bribe."

Making a joke about the settlement, he said, "As someone who has always been a proud employee of this network, I am offended, and I don't know if anything will ever repair my trust in this company. But just taking a stab at it, I'd say $16 million would help."

Lawmakers have sounded out concerns about the show's cancellation, asking CBS if the decision was political in nature.

Sen. Adam Schiff of California was one of the first to comment on it.

"Just finished taping with Stephen Colbert who announced his show was cancelled," Schiff wrote in a late Thursday evening X post.

"If Paramount and CBS ended the Late Show for political reasons, the public deserves to know. And deserves better," Schiff added.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts released a statement just hours after the cancellation announcement.

"CBS canceled Colbert's show just three days after Colbert called out CBS owner Paramount for its $16 settlement with Trump β€” a deal that looks like bribery. America deserves to know if his show was canceled for political reasons," Warren said.

Trump has been a regular topic on Colbert's show β€” particularly during his opening monologues. He's also touched on some of the administration's major scandals, including in his Wednesday episode, where he mentioned Trump and the disgraced financier, Jeffrey Epstein.

In September, Trump criticized Colbert in a Truth Social post.

"Why would they be wasting time and the public's money on this complete and total loser? He is not funny, which he gets paid far too much to be, he is not wise, he is VERY BORING, and his show is dying from a complete lack of viewers," Trump wrote in the post.

Representatives for CBS and Paramount did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

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  •  

A former Singapore Airlines flight attendant started a food stall in 2017. Now, it's a 31-outlet chain featured in the Michelin Guide.

Noorman Mubarak is the owner of Nasi Lemak Ayam Taliwang, a Malay food chain that has 30 outlets across Singapore.
Noorman Mubarak did a sharp career pivot, from being a flight attendant to opening his own hawker stall in 2017.

Aditi Bharade

  • Noorman Mubarak worked a comfortable, glamorous job as a flight attendant for Singapore Airlines.
  • But he felt unfulfilled, saying he was wasting his life serving coffee in the skies.
  • In 2017, he started a hawker stall, working 18 hours in front of the stove. Now, it has 31 outlets.

When Mohammed Noorman Bin Mubarak Ahmad opened his first hawker stall in 2017, he woke up at 2:45 a.m., after just three hours of sleep.

While most of Singapore slumbered, he cooked spicy sambal and marinated chicken and stocked up his tiny stall for a busy day. He squeezed the prep in before his oil and gas job, then ran back after work to serve dinner.

The long hours in front of the stove were a sharp departure from his cushy job as a flight attendant with Singapore Airlines.

Noorman's early alarms and career pivots paid off. Eight years later, he has expanded the first stall into a chain business featured in the Michelin Guide.

Seven years travelling the world, and feeling unfulfilled

Noorman, now 46, has been working in kitchens since he was six.

His father used to run a hawker stall, and he helped out before and after school. After studying a degree in Business Management in Australia, he came back to help his father with the stall, which sold Malay food. After many disagreements on how to run it, he decided he needed a break.

"I just needed to get out," he said. He joined Singapore Airlines as an air steward.

His seven years working as a flight attendant for Singapore Airlines, from 2004 to 2011, were glamorous as he flew to South Africa and Europe. He said he was paid about 5,000 Singapore dollars monthly in the role.

"I thought, this is the life. I'm not going to get married anymore. I'm going to stay single and travel," Noorman said. "For seven years, I forgot about all the things that I learned and aspired to be."

Eventually, a sense of emptiness crept in.

"The job was too easy. Just asking, 'Do you want coffee or tea, chicken or whatever?'" he said. "I didn't need to have done a degree for it."

In 2011, he quit his job at Singapore Airlines and worked a maintenance gig at an oil and gas company in Singapore. Shortly after he quit his job, he met his now wife, who was also a flight attendant at the time.

Noorman worked as maintenance staff for an oil and gas company.
Noorman briefly worked as maintenance staff for an oil and gas company.

Noorman Mubarak

He stayed there for seven more years, working his way up to a managerial role.

Setting up Nasi Lemak Ayam Taliwang

Mubarak's first store is located in Yishun Park Hawker Centre, a large open-air eatery.
Noorman's first store is located in Yishun Park Hawker Centre, a large open-air eatery.

Aditi Bharade

Still, he wanted to build something of his own. And when Yishun Park Hawker Centre was under construction, right in front of his house, he decided to take the leap.

He got a friend to partner with him, and they each put SG$20,000 of their savings into the stall. He started Nasi Lemak Ayam Taliwang in 2017.

Noorman decided to add a twist to the classic nasi lemak recipe. His wife, who is Indonesian, whipped up a mean ayam taliwang β€” a spicy grilled chicken dish β€” so they decided to combine the two.

For the first few months, business was slow. He said he earned less than SG$5,000 monthly, which felt like a huge step back.

"I didn't want to be earning the same amount as I did about 10 years back, and working double the hours," he said.

He ran the stall while working his 9-to-5 job at the oil and gas company, meaning he would come back to the stall after work and feed a hungry dinner crowd until 10 p.m. Then he got up the next morning to prep before work.

"The thought of working almost 18 hours a day, every day, for the next two to three years, that was the most challenging," Noorman said.

The business was also hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw Singapore go into a full lockdown.

Then, in 2021, his stall was included in the Michelin Guide.

Sales started picking up, and Noorman scaled up massively.

Now, Nasi Lemak Ayam Taliwang has 31 stores around the island city, including one in the food court in the glitzy Marina Bay Sands mall. He said daily sales for each of his stalls range from SG$800 to SG$4,000.

A spicy dish with tender meat and fragrant rice

Noorman's signature dish is called Nasi Lemak Ayam Taliwang, a  spicy grilled chicken and rice meal.
Noorman's signature dish is called Nasi Lemak Ayam Taliwang, a spicy grilled chicken and rice meal.

Aditi Bharade

When I visited Noorman's first stall in Yishun Park Hawker Centre, I tried the SG$7.60 Nasi Lemak Ayam Taliwang, the most popular item.

A staff member grilling a piece of chicken leg.
A staff member grilled up a piece of chicken leg.

Aditi Bharade

Nasi lemak is a rice dish with origins in Malaysia, served with roasted peanuts, an egg, anchovies, a sweet and spicy chili paste called sambal, and cucumber slices.

The staff ladled a generous heap of chili paste onto the grilled chicken. The spice did not overpower the savory marinade.

The grilled chicken is topped with a generous serving of chilli paste.
The grilled chicken is topped with a generous serving of chili paste.

Aditi Bharade

The meat was tender and fell off the bone. The sambal added sweetness to the dish, and the jammy egg made it rich and creamy.

Jay Sim, a regular who has been buying the stall's SG$6.60 double chicken wings set fortnightly for about five months, said it's one of the best nasi lemak stalls he's tried in Singapore.

Sim, a 21-year-old TikTok streamer, said the chicken was always crispy, and the rice, flavored with pandan leaves, was fragrant.

Hands off the stove, and happier than ever

Noorman's first store in Yishun Park Hawker Centre.
I visited Noorman's first store, in Yishun Park Hawker Centre.

Aditi Bharade

Now, with a workforce of about a hundred people manning his 31 outlets, Noorman said he has not picked up a ladle in six months.

"If you have the opportunity to sit down, relax, play golf, travel, and still get paid, you will want to do that rather than work in a hawker center for 18 hours," he said.

But it was important to carry on his family's hawker legacy and pass it down to his children.

"It's so tiring, my feet were always sore," he said. "But I did it because I want to create this legacy."

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  •  

Death toll rises to 78 after catastrophic Texas flood

woman in american flag outfit holding an umbrella watches flooding.
Extreme flooding in central Texas has left at least 78 dead.

Eric Vryn/Getty Images

  • Extreme flooding in central Texas has left at least 78 dead.
  • Another 41 people remain missing, officials said.
  • 10 girls from a summer camp are among those still missing.

On what should have been a festive Fourth of July, disaster struck in central Texas.

Flash flooding left at least 68 dead in Kerr County, including 40 adults and 28 children, Sheriff Larry Leitha said during a Sunday press conference.

During a separate press conference, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said an additional 10 people were dead in the broader central Texas area, bringing the total death toll close to 80.

Abbott said another 41 people are still missing across the affected area, including 10 children and one counselor from Camp Mystic, a Christian camp for girls along the Guadalupe River.

Abbott signed a federal disaster declaration on Saturday, which President Donald Trump signed on Sunday. Abbott also issued a disaster declaration for six Texas counties in addition to the 15 he identified on Friday, when heavy rains first caused the flooding.

On Truth Social, Trump said his administration was working with state and local officials to respond to the flooding.

"Melania and I are praying for all of the families impacted by this horrible tragedy," Trump wrote on Saturday. "Our Brave First Responders are on site doing what they do best. GOD BLESS THE FAMILIES, AND GOD BLESS TEXAS!"

The X account for Elon Musk's Starlink, SpaceX's satellite internet system, is offering support to affected residents. Musk has a strong presence in Texas through his companies Tesla, X, and SpaceX.

"In support of those impacted by flooding in Texas, Starlink is providing Mini kits for search and rescue efforts β€” ensuring connectivity even in dead zones β€” and one month of free service for thousands of customers in the region, including those who paused service so they can reactivate Starlink during this time," the post said.

Officials said over 12 inches of rain fell in the county on Friday. The National Weather Service first issued a flash flood warning at 4 a.m. on Friday.

It extended the flood watch until Monday at 7 p.m., saying there was "a threat of flash flooding from slow moving heavy rains overnight and through the day on Monday."

The region is a popular vacation destination and home to multiple summer camps for children. Camp Mystic in Hunt has about 750 campers. Two days after disaster struck, officials said they remain hopeful they can find survivors.

Trash and sticks clumped together, left behind by the flooding Guadalupe River.
A raging Guadalupe River left debris behind on Friday, July 4, in Kerrville, Texas.

AP Photo/Eric Gay

In a statement posted to its website, the Heart O' the Hills, another girls' camp based in Hunt, said its director, Jane Ragsdale, had died in the floods.

"We have received word that Jane Ragsdale did not make it," it said. "We are mourning the loss of a woman who influenced countless lives and was the definition of strong and powerful."

It added that the camp was not in session as the flooding hit, and that "most of those who were on camp at the time have been accounted for and are on high ground."

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said during an earlier press conference that the Guadalupe River rose 26 feet in just 45 minutes, washing away bridges and buildings in a wide area.

Map of Camp Mystic on the Guadalupe River
Map of Camp Mystic on the Guadalupe River

Google Maps

On Facebook, parents and community members have circulated flyers with contact numbers, urging the public to help locate the missing children.

Kerr County has an estimated population of about 53,900, according to a 2024 count by the US Census Bureau. The county sits in the Hill Country region of Central Texas, which includes cities like San Antonio and Austin. Beyond the Guadalupe River, the region is home to several others, including the Colorado, Concho, and Blanco Rivers.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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  •  

The deadly 787 Dreamliner crash came at a testing time for Boeing and Air India

A view of the site after a plane crashed following takeoff from Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport in India's western state of Gujarat on June 12, 2025.
Air India Flight 171 crashed into a medical college in Ahmedabad.

Stringer/Anadolu via Getty Images

  • An Air India Boeing 787 crashed less than a minute after takeoff on Thursday.
  • The crash comes as both Boeing and Air India are trying to turn themselves around.
  • Attorneys and aviation experts said no conclusions could be drawn until the investigation ended.

Thursday's fatal crash of an Air India Boeing 787 shortly after takeoff comes as both the airline and Boeing try to revive their public images.

After 2024 became an annus horribilis for Boeing, 2025 is crucial for the planemaker to show it is successfully overhauling its processes.

CEO Kelly Ortberg, who took over last year and has made the turnaround the centerpiece of his leadership, has scrapped plans to travel to next week's Paris Air Show, CNBC and Bloomberg reported. The event is a crucial industry showcase. Neither Boeing nor Air India responded to requests for comment from Business Insider.

On Thursday, Ortberg shared the company's "deepest condolences" to everyone affected and said a team stood ready to support the investigation.

After visiting the crash site Friday morning, Air India CEO Campbell Wilson said in a video statement, "We know that the investigations will take time but we will be fully transparent and will support the process for as long as it takes."

"Air India will continue to do everything we can to care for those affected by this tragedy, and to uphold the trust placed in us," he added.

'The crash derails Boeing stock's positive momentum'

When an Alaska Airlines 737 Max lost a door plug during a January 2024 flight, regulators capped Boeing's production of the type. A seven-week strike then shut down key facilities, further hurting revenue.

Boeing ended 2024 as the Dow Jones' biggest loser, as its share price fell 31%. Investors had been reassured by Ortberg's work to turn the company around, and the stock had risen more than 20% in 2025 before the crash.

It dropped about 4% after Thursday's crash and fell more than 3% Friday morning.

Morgan Stanley analysts said Thursday that the crash "derails the positive momentum on Boeing's stock."

Jeff Windau, a senior industrials analyst for Edward Jones, said in a research note that he expects near-term volatility and raised the possibility of enhanced scrutiny on Boeing's processes.

"However, at this time, we do not feel there will be a long-term impact to production," he added.

Air India has been working to turn itself around

Following decades of state ownership and huge losses, Air India was acquired by the Tata Group in 2022. The airline has expanded with hundreds of additional flights, flying 60 million customers to 103 destinations through 2024.

The new owners invested billions, and the airline has ordered hundreds of planes to replace its aging fleet.

In a December interview with BI, Wilson compared his work revitalising Air India to "drinking from a firehose."

He added that he thought the turnaround was close to completion, but said there were supply-chain constraints. "Until we upgrade the aircraft, then people won't believe that the transformation has happened," Wilson said.

Alan Tan, an aviation law professor at the National University of Singapore, told BI that Air India in particular would have an immediate hit to customer perception.

"But as other leading airlines facing crises have shown, these are not insurmountable," he added. "Transparency and accountability in investigations, and consistent messaging to the public, will hopefully reduce the risks of a media spectacle."

A lengthy investigation

It will take a thorough and lengthy investigation before there are answers about what caused the crash.

Attorneys who have battled Boeing in the courts were among the people BI spoke to who were hesitant to draw any conclusions.

"The fact that this tragedy involves a Boeing aircraft does not necessarily mean that there's something wrong with the actual aircraft β€” as distinguished from issues surrounding maintenance, or even products that are not Boeing's, such as the engines," said Robert Clifford, lead counsel for the families of victims of the 2019 Ethiopian Airlines crash, in which a 737 Max crashed shortly after takeoff, killing more than 150 people.

He added that a quick and efficient investigation is necessary to "help calm the public."

Thursday's incident was the first fatal crash and total hull loss of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner, one of the most advanced passenger jets, which entered service in 2011.

The model has faced some criticism from whistleblowers. Last year, Sam Salehpour, a quality engineer at Boeing, told NBC he observed "shortcuts to reduce bottlenecks" in manufacturing 787s. Boeing responded that it was "fully confident in the 787 Dreamliner."

On Thursday, Salehpour's attorneys urged the Federal Aviation Administration to release a report investigating his claims.

Richard Aboulafia, managing director at Aerodynamic Advisory, told BI, "It's a terrible tragedy, but I just don't see how this impacts anything [for Boeing]."

"Unless it's the unlikely event that they do find a design or manufacturing flaw, but after all these years, both for this type of aircraft and this particular aircraft, that's not normal," he added.

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  •  

Coach's bet on dangly bag charms is paying off, and there's one style Gen Z can't get enough of

A pink Coach bag with bag charms.
Coach's CEO said bag charms added to the brand's success this latest quarter.

Jeremy Moeller/Getty Images

  • Coach's bet on bag charms is paying off.
  • The CEO of Coach's parent, Tapestry, said the brand's bag charms and straps contributed to its success.
  • She said Coach's $95 Cherry Bag Charm was a "Gen Z favourite."

Coach is known for its handbags, but its little dangly keychains and trinkets are boosting its business, too.

The CEO of Coach's parent company, Tapestry, Joanne Crevoiserat, spoke in an earnings call on Thursday about the success of bag charms.

"Our bag charms and straps added to our success, providing consumers with further opportunities for self-expression, with the 'Cherry Bag Charm' remaining a Gen Z favorite," Crevoiserat said to investors.

Bag charms vary largely in size and form, from miniature stuffed toys and toy figurines to beaded chains. Style experts BI previously spoke with said charms function as a way to express the wearer's identity and personality.

Coach has a wide selection of charms, ranging from $20 for a simple bow charm to $195 for the spider bag charm. It also sells a collection of metallic chains that can be hooked onto bag straps.

The Cherry Bag Charm, which Crevoiserat called a "Gen Z favorite," retails on Coach's website for $95.

Crevoiserat's comments come as retail brands have been betting big on bag charms to win the support of younger customers. Brands from KFC to Balenciaga have released bag charms β€” either in the form of limited edition drops or permanent collections.

Crevoiserat said nearly 70% of Coach's 900,000 new customers in North America were Gen Z and millennials.

Representatives for Tapestry did not respond to a query from Business Insider on the amount of sales the bag charms brought in in the latest quarter.

Tapestry reported a 7% revenue increase in its latest quarter earnings compared to the year before, with $1.58 billion in sales.

Coach, in particular, saw a 13% year-on-year growth, with sales of more than $1.29 billion. The brand has 324 stores in the US and 599 internationally.

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