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Posted by PriorityLeft 20 hours ago

Cloudflare to cut about 20% workforce(www.reuters.com)
https://blog.cloudflare.com/building-for-the-future/
1078 points | 732 commentspage 6
tlogan 4 hours ago|
Lets not miss the obvious: cloudflare is not profitable. I believe the board is probably telling the management that they need to cut costs.

All this “AI bla bla efficiency bla bla agents bla bla” is a convenient excuse.

svara 5 hours ago||
Isn't the most likely explanation here that they needed to show in their earnings call how their bet on becoming AI infrastructure is leading to high revenue growth expectations, and that isn't happening (yet)?

The stock is currently at -17% in after hours trading.

So you need to do something that's good for your margins to show investors.

rohitpaulk 19 hours ago||
That's 2 major layoffs this week (Coinbase being the other). Is there an underlying common reason for this? And is it indeed AI-driven productivity as both companies claim?
stego-tech 19 hours ago||
There's multiple simultaneous narratives: the industry-wide one of slashing well-paid tech talent under the guise of AI productivity boosts, and what's actually going in at each company.

Cloudflare is an outlier because the company doesn't actually make money at present; their past three annual statements show net losses in the tens to hundreds of millions of dollars. Not hemorrhaging cash per se (their cash reserves alone could cover ~9 more years of losses), but still enough to warrant some cutbacks - and AI is the current scapegoat, thus they finger AI and throw folks out the door.

Coinbase's story is different: they're making good money, but their industry is inherently volatile. Again, recent volatility in the crypto markets related to...things...is dragging down long-term prospects for currencies, while ongoing trades are broadly just insiders doing insider things or exiting their positions for liquidity. Still, their share price is down 27% over 5 years and 18% YTD, so they also need to pump their share price so the executives get paid; layoffs are consistently rewarded by the shareholders, thus they axe part of their workforce for the bump and fingerpoint to AI.

Never take what a company says at face value, and always check their balance sheets. What Cloudflare did sucks but could be warranted to some degree; what Coinbase did has no justification whatsoever beyond naked greed.

BirdieNZ 16 hours ago|||
> Cloudflare is an outlier because the company doesn't actually make money at present; their past three annual statements show net losses in the tens to hundreds of millions of dollars.

Their free cashflow is high; they're choosing not to report a profit. I don't think it's useful/accurate to say they don't make money.

Don't get me wrong, they may be doing a layoff to boost margins or enter GAAP profitability but the company revenue exceeds its operating cost by quite a bit.

See in their latest quarterly report: https://cloudflare.net/news/news-details/2026/Cloudflare-Ann...

> First quarter revenue totaled $639.8 million, representing an increase of 34% year-over-year

So they're growing 34% annually.

> Free cash flow was $84.1 million, or 13% of revenue, compared to $52.9 million, or 11% of revenue, in the first quarter of 2025. Cash, cash equivalents, and available-for-sale securities were $4,163.9 million as of March 31, 2026.

...and they have $84 million free cash flow in one quarter, and it's consistently pretty good cashflow.

And they have $4b of cash or cash equivalents stockpiled. It seems pretty healthy to me.

j2jj 17 hours ago||||
Its quite filthy but it benefits them all to lay off lots of people to reset the wage rate in the market... Im sure we will see a wave of re-hiring when this stuff starts to blow over but many initially will be at a much lower wage rate.
13a07e686ca5 18 hours ago|||
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tardedmeme 19 hours ago|||
Employees cost money. The ZIRP free-money era has ended. Companies have been laying off tech people for the last few years.

Also the US economy is collapsing, that probably has some relevance.

sssilver 19 hours ago|||
You couldn't tell this by looking at the stock market.
citrin_ru 7 hours ago|||
Stock market is up only because investors bet on AI, if you'll exclude AI and AI supply chain at best it would be stagnant.
jazzyjackson 10 hours ago||||
To me, it just means a dollar doesn't buy as much of IBM as it used to.
XorNot 17 hours ago|||
Which is the point. There's been a concerted effort by the government to make this the story.

Layoffs and cost of living problems but you must discount the evidence of your eyes and ears and remember it's over 50,000!

The PE ratio of Tesla should tell you everything you need to know about the stock market representing actual economic conditions.

lijok 19 hours ago||||
Zirp ended over 4 years ago, what are you talking about, the us economy is collapsing? What? Care to elaborate on any of this?
blingbot9 19 hours ago|||
Whenever someone brings up ZIRP, especially someone with a username like yours, it's an indicator that they have no clue what they are talking about and like to regurgitate things they read on the internet.

> Also the US economy is collapsing, that probably has some relevance.

Right...wait, what?

Havoc 19 hours ago||
>especially someone with a username like yours,

> -- blingbot9 2026

jwpapi 19 hours ago||
a new level of ad hominem
Overpower0416 9 hours ago|||
Coinbase lost 40% transaction revenue. The AI thing is just smokescreen

https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/crypto/articles/coinbase-s...

heldrida 3 hours ago|||
It seems that Bill.com and UpWork, too!
throwatdem12311 16 hours ago|||
AI productivity is a lie. It’s AI spending because the revenue hasn’t gone up.
strange_quark 18 hours ago|||
I think there's also a certain permission structure that once one sufficiently large org does a big round of layoffs and doesn't get punished, a bunch of others will run the same playbook. We've seen this before -- back in 2022 when Elon fired like half or more of Twitter and the service didn't immediately implode, it gave other CEOs permission to do massive layoffs in the guise of "efficiency" even though the real reason was ZIRP was over. Now they're claiming it's because of AI when it's really that their margins are eroding because the overall economy is slumping and they need to offset AI spend.
saos 19 hours ago|||
Is Coinbase that major though? they're always doing lay-offs.
brazukadev 17 hours ago|||
Meta's layoff was also last week, much bigger than both.
sjZqahg 19 hours ago|||
Coinbase for sure is driven by declining Bitcoin fundamentals and entry of other big players in the Trump inner circle. The AI narrative is a lie.

Cloudflare was overvalued and missed extreme expectations (down another 12% now).

By this time I wonder which investor still believes the AI excuse.

wrqvrwvq 18 hours ago||
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DuckConference 16 hours ago||
IDGI. How is a company that owns a bunch of infrastructure you almost have to use to put your service on the internet not more profitable such that they have to do layoffs?
jgalt212 14 hours ago|
Unlike the other hyperscalers, they don't attempt to wring every last dollar from their customers' wallets.
schnitzelstoat 7 hours ago||
All the AI stuff is just noise to make it sound better - the real issue is the economic downturn.

If anything, AI makes each employee much more valuable because they can be much more productive and most big companies always have stuff that needs doing and opportunities for growth. So it's a sort of Jevons Paradox[1] situation but where human labour is the resource.

Plywood1 9 hours ago||
TBH I'm surprised people don't see the obvious result of this collective madness:

1. Force every engineer to use agentic AI to the max.

2. Constant anxiety at work due to the threat of job loss and unreasonable expectations from management/business.

3. Engineers start yoloing everything using AI while wasting tokens.

4. Speed goes up in the short term, while quality and expertise degrade little by little, all while bleeding money due to AI usage.

5. One year down the line you have a company full of engineers that don't care and a bunch of slop-bloated, bug-ridden products that the customers don't want, and a massive bill.

jcmfernandes 7 hours ago||
I find it surprising that the word "incident" doesn't yet show up on this page. Cloudflare had at least two nasty incidents a few months ago. It certainly shook my confidence in the company's ability to run its infrastructure.
deanputney 19 hours ago||
Wow, can't say I saw this one coming. Cloudflare has been putting out a lot of strong work lately. What percentage of their workforce is this?
age123456gpg 19 hours ago|
20%
badc0ffee 15 hours ago||
That's massive
01284a7e 16 hours ago||
Screw Cloudflare. I went through a bizarre 3+ months hiring process where I would have a disconnected, vague 30 minute interview with someone every couple weeks. Then, suddenly rejected for no real reason given.
pm90 12 hours ago|
Their hiring process is remarkably bad for a company that otherwise is so well run. My most recent experience was them throwing a workday link at me to fill something out before we even had the initial phone screen and the forms/ui was so poorly designed that I stopped responding to them.
edoggie 16 hours ago|
Why are they laying off anyone when you got 500 million plus in pure profit. The tax system needs to be reworked to not incentivize layoffs. Major taxes should happen to support the well fair system in order to support people laid off. This is a stupid system we live in.
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