Meta (META) Begins 8,000 Job Cuts, Focus on AI Efficiency
Meta (META) has initiated the first wave of its planned 8,000 job cuts, starting with employees in Singapore, according to Bloomberg. Notifications reportedly went out at 4 a.m. local time, with additional layoffs expected in the U.S. and Europe later the same day. The cuts primarily target engineering and product teams as Meta pivots more resources toward artificial intelligence (AI).
This restructuring is part of Meta’s ongoing efficiency drive, which CEO Mark Zuckerberg began in 2023 with a major workforce reduction dubbed the “Year of Efficiency.” Since late 2022, the company has cut over 21,000 jobs in multiple phases. These efforts aim to streamline operations, flatten management layers, and fund Meta’s aggressive investment in AI development.
Meta is not alone in this trend. Big Tech firms are rapidly trimming staff to allocate resources toward AI initiatives. A total of 49,135 layoffs have been reported across U.S. companies in 2026 alone due to AI integration, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas. In the crypto sector, companies like Block, Coinbase, and Crypto.com have also downsized this year, citing similar operational shifts.
Meta’s AI spending is raising eyebrows on Wall Street. The company has already allocated more than $100 billion toward AI projects and is planning to build what it claims will be the world’s largest AI facility in Louisiana, an investment reportedly valued at $200 billion. This comes on the heels of Meta’s pivot away from its metaverse-focused strategy, where it spent $80 billion before shutting down its Horizon Worlds VR platform.
While Meta frames these cuts as a way to make the organization “flatter” and “faster,” some employees have expressed concerns about the company’s data collection practices. Earlier this month, internal backlash erupted over a new initiative to gather data from employee devices, such as keystrokes and screen activity, to train its AI models.
From an investor perspective, Meta’s stock currently trades at $602.61 as of May 20, 2026, with a market capitalization of $1.545 trillion. While the stock has shown resilience, analysts are closely watching whether these restructuring efforts and heavy AI investments will translate into long-term profitability. With digital advertising growth slowing, Meta's ability to execute on its AI vision is critical to maintaining its competitive edge.
Additional layoffs could follow later this year, as hinted by internal memos. For now, the market will be evaluating how these workforce reductions and Meta's AI strategy impact its bottom line in the coming quarters.