The technology sector is experiencing a massive wave of AI-driven restructuring, with rumors of Meta layoffs surfacing as the company reportedly prepares for sweeping job cuts that could affect up to 20 percent of its workforce. According to a Reuters report, the potential cuts could impact approximately 16,000 of the nearly 79,000 employees the company reported in its December 31 filing. This downsizing reflects a broader industry trend where major tech companies are reevaluating staffing needs to offset the massive costs of artificial intelligence infrastructure.
While the exact scale has not been finalized and no timeline is set, anonymous sources informed Reuters that senior Meta executives recently notified top leaders about the possibility of workforce reductions. These leaders have reportedly been instructed to begin planning how to trim their teams.
If Meta proceeds with the 20 percent reduction, it will mark its largest downsizing since the 2022 and 2023 restructuring period, which CEO Mark Zuckerberg called the “year of efficiency.” During that time, Meta cut about 11,000 jobs—roughly 13 percent of its staff—in November 2022. Four months later, the company eliminated another 10,000 positions to streamline operations and shift spending priorities.
Responding to the reports, Meta spokesperson Andy Stone dismissed the claims, stating, “This is speculative reporting about theoretical approaches.”
Heavy Investments in Artificial Intelligence
The primary driver behind the anticipated Meta layoffs is the company’s massive financial commitment to generative AI. Zuckerberg has aggressively pushed Meta to compete in the generative AI race, announcing a $600 billion plan to build data centers through 2028.
Meta is also spending heavily on acquisitions and talent. The company recently purchased Moltbook, a social networking platform designed for AI agents, and is spending at least $2 billion to acquire Manus, a Chinese AI startup. Furthermore, Meta is recruiting high-profile AI researchers for a “superintelligence” team, offering massive compensation packages reportedly worth hundreds of millions of dollars over four years.
Zuckerberg has noted that advances in AI are changing the company’s workforce requirements. Speaking in January, the CEO stated that generative AI tools are allowing smaller teams to do the work of much larger groups. He mentioned seeing “projects that used to require big teams now be accomplished by a single very talented person.”
Setbacks in Scaling Enterprise AI
Despite pouring billions into these initiatives, Meta has encountered significant development challenges. Last year, the company faced criticism after early versions of its Llama 4 models produced misleading benchmark results. These setbacks forced Meta to scrap plans to release “Behemoth,” the planned largest version of the Llama 4 model scheduled for a summer launch.
Additionally, Meta’s internal superintelligence group has been developing a new model named Avocado. However, reports indicate that Avocado’s performance has fallen short of expectations, leading to a delayed release. These hurdles illustrate the complex challenges of scaling artificial intelligence at the enterprise level.
A Broader Industry Trend Affecting xAI and Others
Meta’s strategic shift mirrors a wider pattern of AI-linked job cuts. Companies are increasingly relying on AI’s growing capacity to handle tasks that previously required large human teams, leading to shifts in workforce planning.
Elon Musk’s AI startup, xAI, is also navigating significant internal turbulence. The company has lost several co-founders following concerns over the underperformance of its coding division. Co-founders Zihang Dai and Guodong Zhang recently departed, leaving only two of the original eleven founders.
A major issue at xAI has been the coding product Grok, which struggled to gain traction. The product faced poor data quality, slow performance, and issues Musk referred to as “vibe coding” problems. Consequently, Grok has lagged behind rivals like OpenAI’s Codex and Anthropic’s Claude Code, failing to attract paying businesses.
To address quality issues, Musk brought in specialists from SpaceX and Tesla to audit staff work. Meanwhile, the Financial Times reports that xAI employees are complaining that constant restructuring is destroying morale. Some researchers have left due to burnout or better offers from rivals, leaving xAI with many vacant roles. Recruiters are now offering higher financial terms to candidates they previously rejected.
Other major tech players have made similar moves. In January, Amazon confirmed plans to eliminate approximately 16,000 jobs, representing nearly 10 percent of its workforce. Last month, fintech company Block reduced its staff by nearly half, with CEO Jack Dorsey citing the company’s increasing reliance on AI tools to improve productivity.
