Coca-Cola Offers Buyouts To 4,000 US Workers, Plans To Streamline Operation
Coca-Cola is offering voluntary buyouts to about 4,000 people to reduce the number of layoffs it says will take place as it streamlines operations.
Coca-Cola is reducing the number of its individual business segments from 17 to nine, which it said Friday will result in voluntary and involuntary staff cuts.
The streamlining is taking place during a rough stretch for Coca-Cola and almost all companies that cater to social events.
Half of Coca-Cola's sales come from stadiums, movie theaters and other places where people gather in large numbers venues that have been closed during the coronavirus pandemic. Revenue tumbled 28 per cent in the Atlanta company's most recent quarter.
Shares of Coca-Cola Co. are down about 13 per cent this year.
The initial round of offers will go to people working in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico with the most-recent hire date of on or before September 1, 2017.
Expenses related to the severance programmes are expected to be between about $350 million to $550 million.
JPMorgan's Berlin Moment: Chase Takes On Europe
There is something quietly symbolic about JPMorgan Chase choosing Berlin as its gateway into continental Europe. In a fo... Read more
What Strategy's Bitcoin Sale Really Tells Us
There is a moment in every bull run when the narrative starts to fray. Not with a crash, not with a scandal, but with so... Read more
Coutts Sets Scope On New Continent
Coutts steps into private marketsCoutts, the private bank best known for serving Britain’s wealthiest families and the... Read more
From Cypherpunk To Citadel
How Crypto Moved from the Wild West to the Mainstream Financial SystemA long-form analysis of Bitcoin's journey from fri... Read more
ACB Securities: Building Scale, Trust & Innovation
ACB Securities: Building Scale, Trust and Innovation in Vietnam’s Capital MarketsACB Securities (ACBS) is emerging as ... Read more
War Risk Returns To Markets As VIX Surges
For most of the past year, global markets behaved as though geopolitical risk had largely disappeared. Inflation was eas... Read more