Credit card giant Mastercard Inc. and chemical conglomerate Dow Inc. have announced new layoffs, adding to growing worker anxiety in the U.S. labor market.
This could impact as many as 1,400 employees.
“Recently, we completed a strategic review of our business. This will result in reductions in some areas and roles, but lead to further investment and increased focus in others,” CEO Michael Miebach said.
Additionally, CFO Sachin Mehra estimated Mastercard could incur a one-time restructuring charge of approximately $200 million in the first quarter.
The two measures could cost as much as $1.5 billion, including $600 million to $800 million in severance payments.
“As the way we work evolves, so will our expectations for where and how work gets done,” Dow COO Karen Carter said in the call.
“This will allow us to speed up decision-making and put the right role in the right areas of the company to better align with the changing market landscape and with where our customers are investing,” she said. “We will also adopt new ways of working.”
Dow and Mastercard are the latest major U.S. companies announcing layoffs.
Over the past year, Amazon, one of the world’s largest companies, has implemented various measures to trim red tape, reduce management layers, and invest more in artificial intelligence (AI).
“I recognize this is difficult news, which is why I’m sharing what’s happening and why,” Beth Galetti, Amazon’s senior vice president of people experience and technology, wrote in a memo to employees.
Shifting Labor Market
Whether these announcements mark the start of an acceleration in corporate layoffs remains to be seen, but job cuts—as well as hiring momentum—have been muted in recent months, according to government and private-sector data.Initial jobless claims—the number of individuals filing for unemployment benefits—continue to hover around the historically low level of 200,000.

Recurring claims—a measure of the number of out-of-work individuals receiving unemployment benefits—declined for the third straight week to 1.827 million.
Both readings could reflect low layoffs and a modest hiring uptick. Additionally, recent numbers suggest job growth may be gaining momentum.
Global outplacement firm Challenger, Gray and Christmas will release planned job cuts data for January next week. Early estimates suggest a reading of 43,000, a slight increase from the previous month’s 35,553, according to Trading Economics.
The main event will be on Feb. 6, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes the January nonfarm payrolls report. The latest jobs data will also include benchmark revisions in the 12-month period through March 2025, which could highlight negative job growth.
Economists at Indeed say the U.S. labor market “has sprung a number of concerning leaks,” adding that “labor-market churn” will likely be a key barometer for policymakers at the Federal Reserve.
If hiring weakens significantly or layoffs pick up, that dynamic could falter and prompt the central bank to cut rates more aggressively, they said.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell signaled during his post-meeting press conference on Jan. 28 that employment conditions are unlikely to deteriorate further, suggesting little policy action.







