Relocation is tough under any circumstance. The only time it makes sense (In my opinion) is when it advances your career in a strong and growing company that has made some sort of commitment to you and your career path. That's the only time it warrants uprooting kids from school, a spouse's job, etc. etc. I would not recommend relocating just to hold onto a job at a company known for frequent layoffs, reorgs and other actions that belie an indifference to the life and careers of their actual employees. They are moving things from Denver to Texas because it reduces their costs. In the next few years, if they could save millions in costs by moving jobs from Texas to Pune, India, does anyone think they'd hesitate? Does anyone think they'd consider how many people uprooted their lives to follow the company to Texas? I don't. I would use NOW as an opportunity to find an employer who aligns with your values and is on solid ground both operationally and strategically. TIAA is in a spot from which they may not recover. The whistleblower complaint that alleges self-dealing with the Morningstar software and the Traditional and Real Estate annuities is potentially bad. There are class action lawsuits regarding this issue as well as the Wealth Management issue that led to the $97 million settlement. There is a class action regarding the Covid Vax layoffs. These are just the legal troubles. Then you have the issue of business growth. Where is that growth going to come from? University plans? Universities are shrinking staff and many poorly funded colleges are closing up. Fidelity and Vanguard aren't going away. Younger professors want low-cost liquid funds and are less enamored with annuities. Everyone is different, but all things being equal I'd rather work somewhere with less crisis at the top. A company that has major crises on multiple fronts is simply not in a position to worry about the employees well being, work-life balance or job satisfaction. Just my opinion.
Thanks for this post, @1fcq+1tTLNjqO. Putting it up so it’s not lost in replies.