Meta Layoffs: Is the Facebook Parent Getting Ready for Another "Year of Efficiency"?

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By Jeremy Bowman – Apr 24, 2026 at 3:01PM ESTKey PointsMeta is cutting 10% of its workforce to invest more money into artificial intelligence.The move could help boost margins and make it more competitive in AI models.Meta stock soared following mass layoffs in Nov. 2022. Meta Platforms (META +2.48%) has a history of spending aggressively on new technologies with often disappointing results. It acquired the Oculus VR headset maker more than a decade ago, but has struggled to turn that into a mainstream product despite investing billions of dollars into it. It recently pulled the plug on its metaverse experiment nearly five years after rebranding the company around the virtual reality concept, and it announced layoffs in reality labs after the AI-focused division lost nearly $20 billion last year. Now, Meta is cutting staff again in an effort to retrench and focus on high-value opportunities in AI. In an internal memo on Thursday, the Facebook parent said it would lay off 10% of its workforce, or about 8,000 employees. The company is also eliminating plans to fill 6,000 open roles. The move comes as Meta continues to invest heavily in AI, and CEO Mark Zuckerberg also sees AI-powered tools like coding assistants taking over the work of engineers in the coming years. Layoffs shouldn't be celebrated as they mean real people losing their jobs, but they can trigger a stock movement both when they're announced and as the impact of the cost cuts reveals itself in the financial results. We've seen this before with Meta with its "Year of Efficiency" back in 2023, which led to a surge in the stock. Can the company repeat the same feat? First, a quick history lesson. Image source: The Motley Fool. Meta's first year of efficiency Meta stock plunged through 2022 as investors were skeptical of the metaverse push and as the digital advertising boom of the pandemic dried up, leading the company's revenue growth to briefly turn negative. The stock bottomed after a disastrous earnings report in Oct. 2022, and shortly after, the company said it would cut 11,000 employees, or 13% of its workforce, and followed that up with another 10,000 job cuts as Zuckerberg proclaimed a "year of efficiency." If you had bought stock following the first job cut announcement in Nov. 2022 and held it through the end of 2023, you would have earned a return of 249%. Of course, the layoffs weren't the only reason for those gains then, as tech stocks swung off a brutal bear market as the AI boom kicked off, but the cost cuts did help drive profit improvements. In 2023, Meta's net income jumped 69% to $39.1 billion, and its operating margin improved from 25% to 35%. Costs and expenses rose just 1% as revenue jumped 16%. ExpandNASDAQ: METAMeta PlatformsToday's Change(2.48%) $16.34Current Price$675.49Key Data PointsMarket Cap$1.7TDay's Range$653.90 - $680.6452wk Range$520.26 - $796.25Volume1.1MAvg Vol16MGross Margin82.00%Dividend Yield0.32% Are the latest layoffs a buy signal? Meta isn't in the same position now as it was in late 2022. While the stock has pulled back from its all-time high last July, it's only down 14% from the peak, and the business is still delivering strong growth as the sector is in the midst of an AI boom. This round of layoffs also seems to be more about investing in artificial intelligence, as it plans to spend roughly $125 billion in capital expenditures this year, rather than correcting for its pandemic-era overspending. Still, the layoffs and focus on AI could give Meta stock a needed boost. Meta has fallen behind in the LLM race, though its recent release of its Muse Spark model was received well. It's also the only one of the major hyperscalers that is not an investor in Anthropic or OpenAI. Meta's layoffs won't have the same impact as the 2023 year of efficiency, but if they can boost margins and improve the company's AI prospects, that will make them a win for the company and investors. We'll likely hear more when the company reports earnings next Wednesday. Read NextApr 24, 2026 •By Parkev Tatevosian, CFAShould You Buy Meta Stock Before the Massive Investor Update?Apr 23, 2026 •By Daniel SparksWhy Meta's Layoffs, as Unfortunate as They Are, May Be a Buy Signal for the StockApr 22, 2026 •By Adria CiminoShould You Buy Meta Before April 29?Apr 22, 2026 •By Sean WilliamsRanking the "Magnificent Seven" From Most to Least Attractive, Based on Future Cash FlowApr 21, 2026 •By Rick OrfordMeta Stock Could Surge If This AI Flywheel Starts SpinningApr 20, 2026 •By David Jagielski, CPAIs Meta Platforms Stock a Bargain Buy?About the AuthorJeremy Bowman has been a contributing Motley Fool stock market analyst, covering technology, consumer goods, and macroeconomic trends since 2011.
Before The Motley Fool, Jeremy was a newspaper reporter, restaurant manager, and English teacher abroad. He holds a bachelor’s degree in English from Colorado College and a master’s degree in business administration from American University. One of his Motley Fool headlines was briefly featured on Late Night with Stephen Colbert.TMFHoboX@TMFBowmanStocks MentionedMeta PlatformsNASDAQ: META$675.49(+2.48%)+$16.34*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.
