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Microsoft Plans Thousands of Job Cuts Amid AI Expansion

Microsoft is preparing to lay off thousands of employees, particularly in its sales division, according to a Bloomberg News report published Wednesday. The move comes as the company accelerates investments in artificial intelligence (AI) and realigns its workforce to support the growing demands of the technology.

The layoffs are expected to be announced early next month, following the end of Microsoft’s fiscal year. While the exact number of job cuts has not been confirmed, sources suggest that the move will impact more than just sales roles. Microsoft declined to comment on the report.

This would mark the second significant round of layoffs in 2025, following cuts in May that affected around 6,000 employees.

The tech giant has committed a record $80 billion in capital expenditure this fiscal year, with most of that spending allocated to expanding data centers and AI infrastructure. These investments are designed to support Microsoft’s growing suite of AI-powered services, including its close partnership with OpenAI and integration of generative AI across its software platforms.

The shift mirrors trends across the industry. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy stated on Tuesday that generative AI and agent technologies would likely reduce corporate workforce needs over the coming years, underscoring how automation and AI are reshaping traditional business roles.

With a global workforce of 228,000 employees as of June 2024, Microsoft is balancing aggressive growth in AI with internal restructuring — a sign of how tech giants are repositioning for the next phase of innovation-driven competition.

SoftBank Targets $4.9 Billion via T-Mobile Share Sale, Bloomberg Reports

SoftBank Group Corp is planning to raise nearly $4.9 billion through an overnight block sale of shares in T-Mobile US, according to a report by Bloomberg News on Monday. The Japanese tech conglomerate is offering to sell 21.5 million T-Mobile shares at a price range of $224 to $228 per share.

The proposed sale price reflects a discount of over 3% from T-Mobile’s closing price of $230.99 on Monday. The stake represents approximately 1.9% of T-Mobile’s outstanding shares, based on Reuters calculations. Bank of America is reportedly handling the deal.

Neither SoftBank nor T-Mobile has issued public comments in response to the report.

SoftBank’s decision to divest part of its T-Mobile holdings comes shortly after it reported a 1.15 trillion yen ($7.94 billion) profit for the fiscal year ending March 2025, rebounding from a 227.6 billion yen loss the previous year. The move also signals SoftBank’s continued strategy of realizing gains from past tech investments to support its broader portfolio, which has included both major successes like Alibaba and high-profile failures like WeWork.

The sale is being conducted as an unregistered offering, typically structured to appeal to institutional investors without going through full regulatory disclosures.