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Lay-offs at China’s Big Tech mount with Kuaishou, iQiyi said to be joining ByteDance in job cuts

  • Companies are reportedly laying off more employees than usual for this time of year, setting off “panic among a lot of people”
  • Beijing’s regulatory tightening on the internet sector and rising competition are putting financial pressure on tech giants

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Kuaishou has reportedly began a wave of job cuts along with rival ByteDance and video-streaming service iQiyi. Photo: VCG

A new wave of job cuts is shaking China’s Big Tech firms as 2021 comes to a close, with short video giant Kuaishou, rival ByteDance, and Baidu-owned video-streaming platform iQiyi all said to be trimming their payrolls.

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While it is common practice for Chinese tech firms to lay off underperformers at year’s end, the job cuts this time appear deeper than usual after a year of harsh regulatory tightening on the sector.

Hong Kong-listed Kuaishou has started to let go of employees who received low scores in performance reviews, according to three people familiar with the matter who declined to be named because they are not authorised to speak to the media. Laid-off employees have been offered compensation based on the number of years they had served, plus one month’s salary, the people said.

“It has set off panic among a lot of people in the company because the lay-offs appear to start with highly-paid team leaders,” one of the sources said.

Meanwhile Nasdaq-listed iQiyi also kicked off a wave of lay-offs at the start of this month, trimming more than 30 per cent of jobs at high-expense departments such as marketing and distribution, according to Chinese media Yicai and news portal Sina.

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Dismissed workers at iQiyi have been reportedly offered similar compensation as their peers at Kuaishou. Lay-offs at iQiyi may continue through the Lunar New Year, which begins on February 1 next year, when private businesses in China usually hand out annual bonuses, reports said.

iQiyi and Kuaishou did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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