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John 3:16 & 4:1 ~ 6:7

6 out of last 7 yrs no profit. two key dates. Market crashes right around 3:16. 4:1 is a critical date b/c if MoA is not in the black by then turning a profit, it's almost lights out, game over for the firm. It's not funny. 1st quarter numbers can not be overstated. Be transparent. B-E-transparent. Rich said profit by Q4 2026 & he needs to be held to his own standard. If we are $5-$10M in the negative as of 4/1 firm will have a tough time the rest of year & to quote sleepy Joe, "it's not a joke."


Stock @ 120 today - how soon do the next layoffs start?

Once again the stock has fallen off the map, it was a t a yearly low of $119 earlier today and is not moving out of 120 range - so what next for layoffs? The market is down in general but it's hurting us more than others due to our do-nothing executive weather team. How long before they do the next round???


Hypothetical External Candidates for CUSA CEO?

It’d be a pipe dream to think the Board of Directors would boot SK with another dismal year on tap for 2026 and replace him with a non-Japanese executive, but…

If you could nominate someone outside of CUSA to replace SK, who would you choose?

This company needs fresh perspectives and true leaders who can thrive in challenging markets.


Kyndryl’s $2.8 Billion Vanishing Act: Short Sellers Vindicated as the SEC Moves In

"For nearly a year, the company dismissed short-seller allegations as mere 'falsehoods,' but today those chickens came home to roost with a $2.8 billion loss in market cap."

https://www.chartmill.com/news/KD/Chartmill-41541-kyndryl-accounting-implosion-sec-gotham-city-vindicates


AI market bloodbath!

Apparently some new AI tools spooked the market, because it threatens to automate legal and financial workflows that certain software products specialize in, so they all dropped as a result.

The plus side is the market seems to have forgotten about it already and rallied 2% today, so there's that.

AI is coming for your job!


Global Foundries will be insolvent within 5 years

Due to principles in Semiconductor manufacturing and moores law, GFs products will enter the low cost semiconductor market within 36 months.
SiPho isn’t capturing as much market demand as previous anticipated, and GaN is somewhat niche. Larger scale (7+nM) technologies will become cheap, consumer scale electronics that mostly any foundry in the world will be able to successfully manufacture. GF will scrape along for some time, missing Quarterly targets here, laying off staff there, cutting cost all the way as they try to keep investors and BoD happy. When NYS incentives run out, GF will consider being acquired by other manufacturers. My bet would be TSMC as they continue US expansion, with some potential for Intel as well. Only hurdle is US administration woes, however, GF is not an American company. This is furthermore complicated by massive deficits in skilled labor, prevalence of AI, and opportunities for robotic automation that will present themselves over the next 36 months.
Any employees considering this as FUD, ask yourself, where do you see GF in 5 years? Are things feeling concrete? Or do you feel some ripples in the water.
Costs of production are going up, which always results in profits going down, especially when producing antiquated tech.


Time to buy Toast!

Its stock is down and it has completely taken over the restaurant vertical. Toast destroyed any remaining market share we had in restaurants. Clover completely sidelined by then as we focused on Crystals over priced pipe dream Bento Box. The Clover team will tell you they got pulled off restaurant for years to work on her website no one cares about.


Continental Resources planing Houston move to support Argentina and Turkey

Continental is looking to develop international assets as domestic operations are economically challenging due to commodity prices and increasing OPEX.

Anybody hear the Continental will open an office in Houston to support international operations?


Astronomical price increases drove customers away

Chanel, Zegna, Kiton, Brioni, Cucinelli, Stefano Ricci, Burberry, Ferragamo
The top names in luxury fashion, have all had staggering price increases on merchandise since 2020. Some items have doubled and tripled in price. A Chanel handbag that was $5,500 in 2022 is now over $11,000. kiton men’s blazer was $3,900 in 2022 is now $9,000. Wealthy Customers are not stupid.


If it’s so bad, why haven’t we lost that many clients yet?

It absolutely IS bad, no doubt about it. Every year things have gotten worse and worse. But from a numbers standpoint, have we lost any major clients or even mid sized clients? Or are we just doing well since the market is up and most of our fees are asset-based? I moved out of a finance role years ago so I’m really not close to the numbers as I used to be but would anyone closer have more insight?


The job search is a nightmare right now

Start looking for your next role today, but do not quit. The market is absolutely awful, worse than it looks from the inside. I was laid off and with twenty years in the field, it still took me forever to land something new. Being unemployed puts you at a huge disadvantage from the start. Keep your current seat warm until you've secured another one.


Zonda Forecasts 2026 Housing Strength via Jobs

Employment strength is a key factor for the 2026 housing market. Zonda identified top employment markets to watch for 2026. These markets show strong employment growth and capital investment. Charleston, Columbus, and Raleigh are among the top markets. These areas are expected to have strong future housing demand.

https://www.bellinghamherald.com/news/business/article314486190.html


When will the US Cellular Slugs be Terminated?

Last August, T-Mobile made the mistake of retaining a good portion of the US Cellular workforce, especially the field technicians who have zero technical skills, are overpaid, constantly complain, and make comparisons to “the way they did it at US Cellular,” even though it is inconsequential. There are markets that are over indexed due to this additional “workforce” and it is likely that good T-Mobile employees will be terminated with the slugs remaining here in the near future. If the leadership had any bit of intelligence, they would dump those US Cellular slugs now and try to get back to the way the company was operating prior to both the Sprint and US Cellular disasters that are destroying the company


Current employees, are you planning to stay?

Just curious for those that work here, are you planning to stay and try to ride out the current turmoil? Or actively looking whats out there. Obviously the market is brutal right now that makes switching harder, but I still see a lot of new job posts on LinkedIn, so theres gotta be some companies hiring.


Suspended due to non pay

I work in inside sales, the amount of calls I get from people being suspended due to non pay is at an unprecedented amount. It’s totally unreal.

Couple with the current market being one of the worst sales markets in the last 25 years. They still expect us to exceed quota when literally nobody has any money and everyone’s phones are being shut uff lol.


Non layoff INFORMATION for those caring about info that may or may not correlate directly or indirectly to layoffs??!!&@$

New thread to include but not limited to...
Financial (Market cap, earnings, debt load, %of short interest float, and of course, stock, stock, stock and more stonk!)
Various xerox initiatives that have led to past, present and future(?) demise (Product: 3D metal printers, Drupa 2008, Java UI?) Smooth movery of Fuji M00NING, Lean 6ix Sigma, HP, Lexmark debt deal sans ADF Roller assembly part numbers...)
Really too much more to list but will make another thread for, “Bottomless Word Salad via Leader Beanery.”


Huge TCS North America layoff coming in February

There will be a huge TCS NA layoff next month. The $100K fee per H1-B visa to replace American workers is having a direct impact on hiring onshore for major projects. Therefore TCS will be moving huge numbers of job roles to lower cost countries like Mexico and permanently laying off thousands on USA employees to save cost.
Everyone on the bench will be automatically be gone, along with large numbers of support and administrative staff.
This is the only way for TCS to survive in this competitive market.


Marketing Waste

We’re spending tens of millions of dollars sponsoring and advertising around the College Football National Championship while the company is under pressure, the stock is lagging, and leadership keeps talking about “discipline” and “focus.”

A single 30-second spot costs roughly $1M, and full sponsorship packages run $25–35M+ per year. That’s real money being burned on branding theater at a time when we supposedly “can’t afford” bonuses, flexibility, or meaningful investment where it actually matters.

If cost control is truly a priority, this is exactly the kind of spend that should be questioned first.


How Toyota avoided the EV trap and won't face Ford's massive layoffs

Toyota never fully bought into the EV narrative. While they publicly supported emissions reductions, they:

Maintained skepticism about pure EVs: They kept investing in hybrids and hydrogen.
Made smaller, more flexible commitments: When they revised EV targets downward, they hadn't already signed massive supplier contracts
Didn't bet on regulatory permanence: They assumed political winds could change
Prioritized profitability over political favor: They were willing to be criticized for not moving fast enough on EVs.

The Fundamental Mistake
GM and Ford made massive, irreversible capital commitments based on political promises rather than market fundamentals. They:

Assumed federal policy would remain stable for a decade
Believed subsidies would be permanent
Thought consumer demand would follow regulatory mandates
Locked in supplier contracts before testing market acceptance

It's a classic case of companies mistaking political theater for business strategy. When executives stood on the White House lawn in 2021, they were making commitments that assumed the administration's policies would survive through 2030. That was a $50+ billion mistake across the industry.
The lesson: Never make billion-dollar bets assuming political conditions won't change, especially in a democracy where administrations change every four years.


Regional and Market Selection criteria

I’m a former manager in the market and this is usually how ICs are selected. It’s mainly based on bonus and performance review on Workday. Top performers with a 120% bonus or above are generally safe, while those below 80% are usually in trouble.

Most ICs fall around the 100% bonus range, and that’s where the ranking list plays a big role. For managers, it’s a different story, they tend to look at who has lower OPEX, and age becomes a bigger factor for both ICs and managers.