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S&P sounds 2008-era alarm on factory layoffs

A new S&P Global report just flashed a 2008-era warning inside arguably the most important parts of the U.S. economy.

For perspective, factory activity expanded in June, and the manufacturing PMI came in stronger than expected by economists. However, underneath that better-than-expected reading, employers sent a very different signal.

Factory job cuts are now running near levels not seen since the aftermath of the financial crisis, excluding the Covid pandemic shock. 

The big concern is not only layoffs. It is what those layoffs say about demand, costs, inventories, and confidence at a time when inflation, oil prices, and Fed policy continue squeezing expectations.

On top of that, strong manufacturing data support the soft-landing case, but deeper job cuts pose questions about how long that strength could potentially last. 

What S&P Global said about factory layoffs 

S&P Global’s June report showed the manufacturing PMI rose to 55.7, beating the Dow Jones estimate of 54.8 and signaling that factory activity is still expanding.

On the surface, it supports the idea that the industrial backdrop is holding up better than expected.

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However, the details tell a weaker story.

S&P said factory job cuts are running at the highest level since 2009, excluding the Covid collapse. Layoffs are often a forward-looking signal. Companies cut workers when they are worried about demand, margins, or costs, not when they believe orders are set to accelerate sharply.

The report also suggests that the manufacturing rebound may be less durable than the headline PMI implies. 

Chris Williamson of S&P Global said factory growth is being temporarily supported by inventory building as companies respond to supply fears. That is not the same as broad, organic demand growth.

If firms are rebuilding stockpiles because they fear delays or rising costs, the activity could fade once inventories normalize.

S&P Global data show factory layoffs nearing 2008-era financial crisis levels.

Kevin Lamarque-Pool/Getty Images

The key numbers behind the manufacturing warning 

  • The S&P manufacturing PMI rose to 55.7 in June, above the Dow Jones estimate of 54.8, indicating factories are still expanding, despite deeper labor cuts.
  • Factory job cuts were the worst since 2009, excluding Covid, making the layoff signal look closer to a crisis-era warning.
  • Manufacturers have cut jobs in three of the past four months, suggesting demand and cost pressures are becoming more persistent.
  • Manufacturing payrolls are still up 23,000 in 2026, which complicates the Fed’s view because the broader labor market has not cracked.
  • The services PMI came in at 51.3, just above the expansion threshold, reinforcing the idea of slower but still positive growth.
  • S&P said output points to roughly 1% annualized Q2 growth, a warning that momentum is fading beneath the headline data.
    Source: CNBC

Why factory and tech layoffs now tell the same story 

The factory layoff warning matters a ton because it isn’t just an industrial story.

It fits a wider corporate pattern in which companies are cutting labor, even when parts of their business still look healthy.

In manufacturing, the pressure comes from demand uncertainty, higher raw material costs, supply delays, and margin protection. S&P’s concern is that factory expansion may be due to temporary inventory rebuilding, rather than durable demand acceleration.

Tech is facing a different version of the same squeeze.

According to Yahoo Finance, Oracle’s workforce fell by about 21,000 employees, or 13%, in fiscal 2026 as the company restructured and deepened its focus on AI and cloud infrastructure. 

Similarly, Amazon cut about 14,000 corporate jobs in October 2025, saying AI adoption and efficiency were part of the shift, according to Reuters.

Microsoft-owned LinkedIn planned to cut about 5% of staff in May 2026 as it reorganized around growth areas.

The AI angle is crucial. 

Tech companies are cutting back because growth has slowed, but they are also freeing up capital for data centers, chips, cloud capacity, and AI talent. According to AOL, Meta’s reported layoff planning of 8,000 jobs came as the company was preparing massive AI infrastructure spending.

That connects back to factories. 

Industrial cuts show pressure in the real economy. Tech cuts show the same cost discipline spreading to companies still investing aggressively. 

The industrial layoffs already hitting U.S. workers

  • Dow announced in January 2026 that it would cut about 4,500 jobs, or 13% of its workforce, as the chemical giant pushed automation and a $2B profitability plan, according to Reuters.
  • GM announced in March 2026 that it would temporarily lay off about 1,300 workers at Factory ZERO in Detroit as it adjusted EV output to weaker demand, Reuters noted.
  • Applied Materials announced in October 2025 that it would cut about 1,400 jobs, or 4% of its workforce, after tighter chip export controls weighed on its outlook, Reuters reported.
  • Lucid announced in June 2026 that it would cut about 18% of its U.S. workforce, including hourly manufacturing workers, according to Reuters.
  • Rivian announced in June 2026 that it would cut hundreds of workers, less than 2% of staff, after cutting more than 600 in October 2025, according to Reuters.

Related: Tesla stock has a SpaceX problem, veteran analyst says

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