Mass Layoffs Are Back. Are You At Risk?

Via Peak Prosperity

Millions are going to lose their jobs in the coming recession. Will you?

Imagine the following scene playing out at work tomorrow:

You arrive in the morning to find a note reading ‘HR wants to see you’. About what?, you wonder.

Seeing your HR manager already in the conference room with the door closed, you fidget as you wait. A knot begins to form in your stomach that gets tighter as the minutes tick by.

Suddenly, the door opens. A colleague stumbles out, looking ashen-faced. Then the HR manager’s head emerges, notices you and says “Ah, please come in”.

“I’m sorry to tell you that the company is letting you go,” she begins. “Sales have slumped and we simply can’t employ as many people. It’s nothing personal.”

And just like that, your job is gone.

You’ll get a month’s salary as severance pay, plus two-weeks more if you sign a ‘non-disparagement’ clause. And they’ve just handed you a pile of forms that supposedly will guide you through the process of applying for COBRA health coverage and unemployment benefits, should those be necessary.

And that’s it.

Oh, they’ve already taken your computer back to IT. You’ve got 15 minutes to collect any personal items and say your goodbyes. But please don’t linger. We’d hate to get Security involved…

Thanks for your service! And best of luck in your next venture!

What would you do if this happened to you tomorrow? Really chew on that for a minute.

Would you feel surprised? Liberated? Petrified?

What would your job prospects look like? Are you confident you could get re-hired quickly? Or are you looking at months (or longer) of unemployment?

What will it do to your household finances if you’re out of work for a prolonged time? Are you the primary breadwinner? Do you have other income or substantial savings that can sustain you? If not, how would you plan to make ends meet?

Most people are caught flat-footed by layoffs. There’s a complacency a steady paycheck offers that’s instantly ripped away by a pink slip. Few people are ready — emotionally, professionally, or financially — for the abrupt ending to the status quo a layoff brings.

Mike Tyson once eloquently quipped: “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth.” Similarly, everybody can afford to be optimistic about tomorrow until they get canned.

Have ‘Layoff Anxiety’? You’re Not Alone.

If the thought-exercise above gave your stomach butterflies, you’re not alone. Nearly half (48%) of US workers report experiencing ‘layoff anxiety’.

And, this is during the “good times”, folks. Officially, we’re still in the longest economic expansion in US history.

What’s it going to be like when this long-in-the-tooth expansion ends, as all inevitably must?

And as we’ve been furiously covering here at PeakProsperity.com, it sure looks like the end is fast arriving. The inverted yield curve in US Treasurys, slowing US growth and negative growth rates in major European economies, anemic global shipping volumes, and a raft of other dependable indicators are flashing warnings that the world economy (including the US) is plunging towards recession.

A recession that corporate America is woefully unprepared for, due to record levels of debt.

9 Trillion Reasons To Reduce Headcount

In response to the past decade of extremely cheap and plentiful credit supplied by the world’s central banks QE (quantitative easing) efforts, company executives have borrowed much more aggressively than in the past. Often to repurchase their company’s own shares in hopes of boosting its stock price (and thus their stock-based compensation packages).

And a worrisome number (hundreds of $billions) of such corporate loans made over the past several years have been low quality, high-risk, and covenant-lite.

As a result, today’s US companies are as or more dangerously leveraged than ever before. More than $9 Trillion of debt now burdens the balance sheets of America’s corporations:

Corporate indebtedness charts

As growth continues to slow and corporate profits decline, debt service takes up an ever-greater percentage of cash flows. At some point, headcount cuts become unavoidable.

The Robot Took My Job

On top of that, as we’ve been long warning about here at PeakProsperity.com, employers currently have a tremendous perverse incentive to automate and replace human labor with technology.

The simple and harsh truth is that it’s expensive, and becoming more so, to employ humans. Wages, health care, retirement benefits, workers comp, OSHA regulations, lawsuits, training, vacations, sick days — it all adds up. Machines free employers from all of those costs, headaches and potential liabilities.

Meanwhile, technological advancements in robotics and AI (artificial intelligence) are on an exponential track. Capabilities are skyrocketing and costs are coming down. With the ability to borrow at rock-bottom interest rates, is it any surprise that companies are investing in automation as fast as they can?

White-shoe consulting firm McKinsey predicts that 50% of current work activities are at risk of being automated by 2030, and that by that time, 400-800 million workers worldwide will be displaced by technology — creating “a challenge potentially greater than past historic shifts”.

A historic transition away from human towards automated labor is underway. It’s happening in every industry and will impact every job function, at every level of the org chart.

And unlike with outsourcing or off-shoring, once these jobs are successfully automated, they’re “gone” as far as human workers are concerned. They’re never going to be un-automated.

It Has Already Begun

Remember the mass layoffs of 2008 and 2009? When thousands of people instantly lost their jobs as companies started jettisoning workers?

Well, they’re back.

In 2019 so far, we’ve seen reductions-in-force reported across a number of industries from the likes of HSBC (4,750 jobs), Nissan (12,500 jobs) and Deutsche Bank (18,000 jobs). Other well-known brands letting employees go include Siemens, Uber, US Steel, Kellogg’s, Ford, Disney, and United Airlines.

At this stage, it’s not (yet) like the carnage seen during the Great Recession. Remember how god-awful scary this was, as hundreds of thousands of people were laid off every month for two years?

Job losses between Dec 2007 and Dec 2009

8.8 million jobs were lost during this period. When layoffs are that widespread, it’s just a numbers game. Amongst yourself, your family, and your friends — at least some of you are going to fall victim.

How bad could things be next time? Bad enough to take protective action, we think.

And it’s not that hard for us to make the argument that the future wave of mass firings may be substantially worse. So don’t rest on your laurels.

Signs Of Trouble To Watch For

What early-warning indicators can you monitor to assess whether your company, or your specific job, is at risk?

Company Risk Factors

First, it helps to look at the industries that shed the most workers during the Great Recession. History doesn’t repeat itself exactly, but it often rhymes:

Jobs Lost By Industry During Great Recession

Do you currently work in one of these industries? If so, the above chart should give you a general sense as to how yours will fare relative to others should we indeed re-enter recession soon.

But not all companies within an industry are created equal. How can you tell if you’re currently employed by one of the more vulnerable players?

Here are classic signs of trouble to look out for:

  • Declining financials — Does your company have a higher Debt/Equity ratio that its industry peers? Are revenues and/or earnings flatlining or decreasing? Are Accounts Payable increasing as a percentage of total Liabilities? All are potential indications of a company on shaky ground.
  • Freezes — Has your company announced a freeze on new hires, budgets and/or bonuses? These are all signs of tightening pursestrings, and they constrain prospects for future growth. It’s rare for sizable layoffs to be announced before any, if not all, of these is tried first.
  • Postponement of key projects — similar to freezes, big deployments are often pushed back or shelved completely in attempt to reduce costs before headcount cuts are considered. Of course, once you reduce your planned projects, you then realize you don’t need as many people…
  • Consolidation — this is when business units are collapsed together for ‘greater efficiency’ and ‘cost savings’. This is a sign that pennies are starting to be pinched, and soon “cost savings” starts to look an awful lot like “employing fewer people”.
  • Being acquired — in good times and bad, employees at a company being acquired are at greater risk. Acquisitions are intended to unlock “synergies”, which often is a fancy way to say “if we combine our companies, we can fire all the people who have redundant jobs”. Since they don’t have relationships with the power players at the acquiring firm, those being acquired are usually the first to be shown the door.
  • Your company is “pivoting” — “pivoting” is the new smokescreen term for “What we’re doing isn’t working so let’s try something else”. True, it’s wise to abandon a doomed path. But not if you’re just trading it for another half-baked idea. While there are examples of pivots that turned a failing enterprise into a world-class success (did you know that YouTube initially started as a dating site?), those are the exceptions.
  • Bad news/too many rumors — “Where there’s smoke, there’s fire”. When your company is unfavorably covered by the trade media for long enough, it’s usually for good reason. Just ask the folks who work (or used to) at Sears, Theranos, JC Penny, Toys “R” Us, or Forever 21.
  • Senior management leaving — when the rats at the top start leaving the ship at the same time, it’s time to worry. They know a lot more than you do about your company’s condition. Right now, I’d be really worried if I worked at a place like Tesla…
  • Sudden stock drop — a strong stock price makes up for a lot of operational deficiencies (such as, in the example of Netflix, Uber or We Work, losing billions in cash flow every year). But when investors abandon the dream underlying your company and the stock starts tanking, life can quickly get a lot worse. Profitability and positive cash flow suddenly becomes matters of life and death. Those working at a high-flier Tech unicorn or starry-eyed start-up need to be attuned to how quickly things can turn should investors sour.

Is There A Target On Your Back?

Layoffs are like tossing sand bags out of a sinking hot-air balloon. You throw a few overboard to see if that stops the fall. If it doesn’t, you chuck out a few more.

They tend to happen as a sequence. In the first wave, the obvious underperformers are let go. That’s the easy decision, and may even be positive for morale. But if the company is still in trouble, another wave –maybe more — will be needed.

So, how can you tell if you’re at risk for the next wave in the series?

Here are some common predictors:

  • Your workload is lightening — workers with spare capacity offer a lower ROI (return on investment). Either your company’s throughput is diminishing (a bad sign) or your boss is re-directing your work to other people (a very bad sign).
  • Increase in status reports — if you’re suddenly being asked to rationalize and report on all of your activities, it’s usually a sign that someone higher up the chain from you is trying to “justify” the resources in your department. It’s a signal that the future of your department — or you, specifically — is under review.
  • “Too” young — historically, younger workers are often the first let go in a layoff as they have the least work experience and the least seniority within the organization. During the GFC, unemployment among young workers nearly doubled from 5.4% in 2007 to 9.2% in 2010.
  • “Too” old — in a growing number of industries (Tech, in particular), it’s increasingly common for older workers to be laid off first. Younger workers often are more familiar and facile with the latest software and technology, and they’re often substantially cheaper to employ. They’re willing to work longer hours for less pay and don’t have the benefits footprint that older workers with families do. ‘Ageism’ is fast becoming a common legal complaint in today’s layoffs.
  • Your boss suddenly departs — while this may or may not be a sign that your department is losing status within the company, it often means you’re losing your strongest champion within the organization. If your boss leaves abruptly, be sure to connect with her privately to get the inside scoop. Now that she’s not speaking for overall management, she’ll likely to be fully transparent with you about the company’s condition.
  • Friction with your boss — while never a promising sign, if you and your boss aren’t getting along, chances are you won’t be at the top of his list of employes to fight to keep during a RIF (reduction in force). In fact, if you’re suddenly experiencing badwill where there was none before, it could be that he’s trying to build a case for making your layoff an “easy call”.
  • Being ‘asked’ to take a pay cut — this is a pretty clear sign that you’re less essential to the company than you were previously and/or that your company is *really* hurting cash flow-wise. If you’re ‘asked’ this, take it as a sign from the universe to start updating your resume.
  • Being asked to train someone else or an outside firm on your responsibilities — this is another clear “wake up call” that your job is likely on the chopping block. Unless you know for sure you’re getting promoted, take this as a message to expect a visit from HR soon.
  • Your spider-senses are tingling — companies are social institutions by design; they’re made up of people (at least, they still are for now). If you notice the execs and senior managers looking stressed or spending a lot of time huddled in conference rooms, if the water cooler talk revolves around company problems, if perks start quickly disappearing, if people start shunning you — these are all warning signs you should heed. Don’t ignore your gut.

How To Reduce Your Vulnerability

After taking an honest assessment of your job situation, would taking some precautionary measures against a layoff make sense?

Spoiler alert: if you’re one of the 132 million full-time employees currently working in the US, the right answer is pretty much always “yes”. There’s simply no good reason to trust your primary/only income source to blind faith.

In Part 2: The Layoff Survival Handbook, we detail out the steps to take now to reduce your vulnerability to a layoff, and the critical steps to take right away should you become laid off.

Many of these will enhance your career trajectory and satisfaction even if a pink slip never arrives. But should one do, you’ll be far better off for having taken them.

Given the mounting recessionary risks ahead, we all need to prepare for what’s coming.

Click here to read Part 2 of this report (free executive summary, enrollment required for full access).

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32 Comments
Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
August 31, 2019 6:00 pm

Notice only government workers and those who receive pay from the local government (utilities) or though the federal government (medical and education) didn’t cut personnel but hired more. Everybody else lost jobs.

John
John
August 31, 2019 7:16 pm

Back up plan. Always have a marketable skill. Paper pushin’ and planning for parties are NOT marketable skills.

KaD
KaD
  John
August 31, 2019 10:39 pm

A marketable skill like what?

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  KaD
August 31, 2019 10:49 pm

coding?

Anonymous
Anonymous
August 31, 2019 7:36 pm

We are talking about professional jobs that have been created by government regulation. These jobs pay high salaries. Those who went for these jobs are the vulnerable ones. But while times were good these jobs gave those who followed this path unjustified benefits. Times are changing because this expensive system has run it’s course. Those with real skills that benefit society will have jobs in this distorted economy.

This is not like the 1930s. We have lot’s of infrastructure to maintain. Those who have skills to maintain the infrastructure will have jobs.

Those who have followed the path of high paying jobs created by government regulation and interference in the free flow of commerce will lose everything; even their homes. They have nothing to contribute to the real economy. They are drones that took advantage of a system that has no values.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Anonymous
August 31, 2019 11:21 pm

Let’s hope so. Unless everybody gets bailed out again except us.

card802
card802
August 31, 2019 7:38 pm

I’m ready to retire anyway, I don’t have a pension and I’m not counting on S.S. Since 2008 I got some shit together.
But I worry about my kids.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  card802
August 31, 2019 10:29 pm

Wonder why the media is pushing the recession theme/narrative so hard? The object is to set the stage and get the ducks lined up for when the TPBP pull the plug. They are satanists and must let the victims know ahead of time about what they’re up to or else they fear their bad actions will boomerang back on them. Or something like that.

PAULA
PAULA
  Mygirl...maybe
August 31, 2019 10:32 pm

Hmmm. How does it feel?

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  PAULA
August 31, 2019 10:50 pm

So now you’re trolling me? Darling, I’ve gone nose to nose with Llpoh. You are an amateur. Perhaps you should sober up and then post later?

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Mygirl...maybe
August 31, 2019 11:23 pm

And Mygirl…Maybe is still here, so good for her.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Vixen Vic
August 31, 2019 11:44 pm

Gracias Senhora

Hollywood Rob
Hollywood Rob
  Mygirl...maybe
September 1, 2019 12:08 am

I do apologize Mygirl. My intention was to keep maggie tied up trolling me so you guys could talk without interruption. Apparently maggie, as paula, slipped past my grasp and wandered around fouling the air on other peoples posts. You should see all the names that she has made up for my little post and Doug’s is almost incomprehensible, what with her drunken typing and her attempts at deceit.

Her trolling isn’t really any better as paula but the picture is better than that ugly puss that she posts with her mg comments. By the way, her picture, her real picture, is really old. She is trying to pass herself off as 50 ish when she is actually in her 70’s. I personally don’t see the point but I guess it floats ec’s boat.

Hollywood Rob
Hollywood Rob
  Mygirl...maybe
September 1, 2019 12:13 am

Mygirl. We all know that there is always a recession. There has never not been a recession. There are good times and then there are bad times. That can not be debated and I don’t think that is the real question.

The real question is “when” is the recession. Those who oppose trump want the recession now, and those who support trump want the recession after the election. As we all know, the vast majority of merkins are morons. They will vote for a president when times are good and they will vote against him when times are bad. So the narrative is being prepared so the communists can cry recession before the election and stop trump.

Who knows if it will work, given the comprehension level of the average voter (cough – maggie/paula).

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Hollywood Rob
September 1, 2019 12:44 am

It’s up to the Federal Reserve. They can make or break a president by manufacturing a recession or propping up the economy just enough to get him re-elected. The Fed has always been political and needs to be done away with.

(Unless of course, Trump falls for going after the 2nd Amendment and then he’ll be the one responsible for not getting his second term.)

The economy is definitely going to hit trouble because the Federal Reserve can’t keep propping it up. The party is going to come to an end. And when it blows, it’s going to be big and it’s going to be hell. How I wish Trump would talk to Ron Paul about the Fed and the economy and do something about it.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Vixen Vic
September 1, 2019 1:00 am

Trump has been assigned the role of scapegoat, the economic collapse was set to happen on his watch. The Stock Market is an artificial construct, it will never be allowed to collapse unless TPTB want it to. The plunge protection team (aka: the FEd) is for keeping the stock market green and artificially propped up.

The Fed should never have happened in the first place, there is no need for a central bank, especially a central bank that ‘loans’ money to the government. What no one really understands about the national debt is: to whom is said monies owed? Do away with the Federal Reserve and the debt goes away too.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  Mygirl...maybe
September 1, 2019 1:09 am

Yes, but you have to have a something to replace those Federal Reserve notes with first. My own suggestion is gold and silver, though many on here will shout me down for that one.

card802
card802
  Vixen Vic
September 1, 2019 7:18 am

I remember watching a guy on tv who lost it all to Madoff.

He was from Italy, his grandfather and father owned large grape farms. He sold it all to get paper, gave the paper to Bernie in hopes of more paper, and he lost all the paper.

What he said was he forgot what his grandfather and father taught him, what real wealth was. He traded his wealth, for paper.

Look at most of the wealthy people in the world, they don’t hold paper, they have assets that are valued in whatever paper you choose.

DONKEY
DONKEY
  card802
September 1, 2019 9:18 am

A great reminder.

Festering Boil
Festering Boil
August 31, 2019 9:02 pm

Be a Clinton family or foundation hitman…. I do believe hiring in that area will occur simultaneously with the recession…….

James
James
  Festering Boil
August 31, 2019 9:25 pm

Fester,you sure will not at that point want the security gig!

James
James
August 31, 2019 9:23 pm

For those who have not,read corporate sabotage,oh,and a few dead mans switches for your un planned job demise/let em take your company computer,you had records/copies ect.,right?!

Welcome to the brave new world,this is a small part of why you have prepped,personal SHTF.

BWD
BWD
August 31, 2019 9:23 pm

Mass layoffs are coming because of capitalism and trickle down economics.

BB
BB
  BWD
August 31, 2019 10:16 pm

Anybody can learn to drive a commercial truck. Get with right company and you can make 60 thousand out of the gate.
At least you want go hungry.

PAULA
PAULA
  BB
August 31, 2019 10:32 pm

If EC dumps me are you available?

Hollywood Rob
Hollywood Rob
  PAULA
September 1, 2019 12:44 am

Oh he dumped you days ago.
comment image

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  BWD
August 31, 2019 11:27 pm

Not capitalism but socialistic programs, bloated unnecessary government agencies and programs, gigantic military budgets, and trillions in debt thanks to the Federal Reserve. If you get rid of the Federal Reserve, reduce the size of government, and go back to free-market capitalism, problem solved, though there will be some pain on the way because the system is so screwed up now.

KaD
KaD
August 31, 2019 10:39 pm

I work in a three person office that survived the 2009 debacle and my boss pays me shit while he’s raking in about $160K a year so I think I’m okay since he couldn’t find a better person cheaper if his life depended on it.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 1, 2019 7:06 am

Fact the working people of industry were tossed under the bus starting in the 80’s and never really recovered . Their jobs were outsourced their benefits of health and retirement were bankrupted thru favorable bankruptcy laws and it continued for 40 plus years .
Meanwhile government employees muddled along still receiving modest increases piling debt upon those under the bus so this select voting block group can continue to retire in their 59’s . This as the 50 to 60 year old stands there saying welcome to Wal Mart at minimum wage .
The only people prospering now are government employees and those in the medical fields , all paid by taxation or insurance . Of course those hiring sanctioned foreign workers at a fraction of what an American would demand with government blessing or those playing the hiring illegals Shell game . Look at any construction site , all 5 foot nothing Spanish speaking , the excuse those white and black Americans don’t want to work !
Translation : as an employer in can Fuck over 5 illegals paying them what I would have to pay 2 Americans ! These are the business people that need to be stripped of everything thru asset forfeiture , the charge “ economic treason” !
Of course that should be levied to most of our elected representatives who spend millions for for a $150 k per year job , hold on to that position for 10 years and walk away with a millionaire and a corporate appointment to some board of directors , bribery for a job well down covertly fucking taxpayers up the ass for a decade !

vl
vl
September 1, 2019 10:20 am

Great article – I wish this site were set up in such a way that one could just send something like this on to others by e-mail (other than just sending a link or copying the whole thing & pasting it into the body of the message).

None Ya Biz
None Ya Biz
September 1, 2019 2:37 pm

I retired before the current shit show started. Thank the Almighty Creator!