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Meta reportedly weighs layoffs affecting 20% of workforce over AI costs

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Meta reportedly weighs layoffs affecting 20% of workforce over AI costs

Meta is reportedly weighing layoffs that could impact at least 20% of its workforce as the tech giant looks to offset rising artificial intelligence costs.

The cuts come as the technology company aims to offset the cost of artificial intelligence infrastructure and prepare for greater efficiency brought about by AI-assisted workers, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

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The outlet added that the timing and size of the potential layoffs have not been finalized.

When reached for comment, a Meta spokesperson told FOX Business, “This is a speculative report about theoretical approaches.”

META CUTS OVER 1,000 JOBS IN MAJOR METAVERSE RETREAT

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is seen arriving in at a court in Los Angeles to stand trial over a social media lawsuit.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg arrives at the Los Angeles Superior Court at United States Court House on Feb. 18, 2026, in Los Angeles, California. (Jill Connelly/Getty Images / Getty Images)

According to Reuters, top Meta executives recently shared plans for the proposed layoffs with other senior leaders at the company.

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If the company were to slash 20% of its employees, the layoffs would amount to Meta’s largest restructuring since 2022 and early 2023, the outlet said.

Meta laid off 11,000 workers in November 2022 — around 13% of its workforce at the time, Reuters reported.

The company cut another 10,000 jobs months later.

JUDGE BLOCKS META FROM INTRODUCING ‘EXAGGERATED’ CLAIMS IN SOCIAL MEDIA TRIAL

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A sign outside of Meta headquarters

Meta is reportedly considering layoffs that could affect up to 20% of its workforce as the company invests heavily in artificial intelligence infrastructure. (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Meta employed nearly 79,000 people as of Dec. 31, according to its latest filing.

Other major companies, including Amazon, have recently announced large-scale layoffs tied to AI developments.

In January, Amazon cut around 16,000 jobs and signaled at the time that more reductions could follow.

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Meta AI

Meta is weighing significant workforce reductions as the tech giant ramps up spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure. (Getty Images / Getty Images)

The company previously announced a first round of cuts totaling about 14,000 white-collar layoffs in October, bringing its corporate reductions to roughly 30,000 roles.

In making the cuts, which represented nearly 10% of its white-collar workforce, Amazon cited efficiency gains from artificial intelligence and broader cultural changes.

FOX Business’ Bradford Betz contributed to this report.

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Goldman warns S&P 500 could decline to 6300 if growth weakens

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Goldman warns S&P 500 could decline to 6300 if growth weakens

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Taylor Sheridan’s New Drama Drops First Three Episodes March 14

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The Madison' Season 1

Taylor Sheridan’s latest neo-Western drama, “The Madison,” premiered Saturday, March 14, 2026, exclusively on Paramount+, launching the first three episodes of its six-episode debut season.

The series, starring Oscar nominee Michelle Pfeiffer and Golden Globe nominee Kurt Russell, marks Sheridan’s return to Montana-set storytelling following the conclusion of “Yellowstone” in late 2024. Unlike direct “Yellowstone” spin-offs such as “1883,” “1923” or the ongoing “Marshals,” “The Madison” stands as an independent series, though it shares the creator’s signature blend of family dynamics, grief and rugged landscapes.

The Madison' Season 1
The Madison’ Season 1

The show follows the Clyburn family, a wealthy New York City clan relocating to the scenic Madison River valley in central Montana after a devastating loss. The move forces them to confront grief, adapt to rural life and navigate human connections in one of America’s most beautiful yet unforgiving regions. Sheridan wrote all six episodes, with Christina Alexandra Voros — who directed episodes of “Yellowstone” Season 5 — helming the series.

Paramount+ adopted an unconventional release strategy for the premiere season: the first three episodes dropped simultaneously on March 14 at 12 a.m. PT (3 a.m. ET), with the remaining three scheduled for Saturday, March 21, also at midnight PT. Episodes include “Pilot,” “Let the Land Hold Me,” “Watch Her Fall” on premiere day, followed by “Tomorrow Is Goodbye,” “No Name and a New Dream” and the finale on the second Saturday.

The staggered rollout differs from Sheridan’s typical weekly drops on Paramount+ for shows like “Landman” or “Lioness.” Paramount executives described it as a way to build immediate buzz while allowing viewers to binge the short season quickly. Season 2, already filmed back-to-back with Season 1 according to Kurt Russell in recent interviews, is expected in 2027, though no exact date has been confirmed.

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Pfeiffer leads as the matriarch navigating profound loss, with Russell portraying a key figure in the family’s new Montana life. The ensemble includes Matthew Fox and Patrick J. Adams in supporting roles. First-look images and the official trailer, released in early 2026, highlighted sweeping Montana vistas, emotional family tension and Sheridan’s hallmark dialogue.

The series arrives amid Sheridan’s prolific output for Paramount, which has expanded its “Yellowstone”-verse with multiple shows. “The Madison” was initially developed under the working title “2024” as a potential spin-off but evolved into a standalone project. Kurt Russell noted in an Entertainment Weekly interview that Pfeiffer and Sheridan advocated for filming two seasons consecutively to accommodate schedules and storytelling needs.

Early reactions from critics and viewers have been positive, with Rotten Tomatoes assigning a 67% Tomatometer score based on initial reviews, praising the performances and scenic cinematography while noting the intimate, character-driven pace sets it apart from more action-heavy Sheridan fare. Some called it his “most heartfelt” work yet.

Paramount+ subscribers can stream all available episodes immediately, with no ads on the Premium plan. The service promotes the premiere with trailers, first-look galleries and behind-the-scenes content on its site.

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As “The Madison” begins its run, anticipation builds for the March 21 conclusion of Season 1 and the already-completed follow-up season. The series reinforces Sheridan’s dominance in modern Western dramas, drawing fans eager for more Montana-based stories after “Yellowstone’s” long run.

With episodes now live, viewers can dive into the Clyburns’ journey of healing and upheaval in the Madison valley.

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Bernstein SocGen cuts Humana stock price target on Stars pressure

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Bernstein SocGen cuts Humana stock price target on Stars pressure

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Macquarie downgrades DiDi stock rating on Brazil expansion costs

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Macquarie downgrades DiDi stock rating on Brazil expansion costs

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Deploy Cash Now Into Double-Digit Yielding Passive Income

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Deploy Cash Now Into Double-Digit Yielding Passive Income

This article was written by

Austin Rogers is a REIT specialist with a professional background in commercial real estate. He writes about high-quality dividend growth stocks with the goal of generating the safest growing passive income stream possible. Since his ideal holding period is “lifelong,” his focus is on portfolio income growth rather than total returns. Austin is a contributing author for the investing group High Yield Landlord, one of the largest real estate investment communities on Seeking Alpha, with thousands of members. It offers exclusive research on the global REIT sector, multiple real money portfolios, an active chat room, and direct access to the analysts. Learn more.

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have a beneficial long position in the shares of ARES, BX, BAM, CGDG, TDIV, HTGC, TRIN, IIPR.PR.A either through stock ownership, options, or other derivatives. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Goldman Sachs says oil flows through Strait of Hormuz down sharply

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Goldman Sachs says oil flows through Strait of Hormuz down sharply

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Housing sales in 50 cities dip 3% to 6.14 lakh units, up 16% in value to Rs 8.4 lakh crore: CREDAI

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Housing sales in 50 cities dip 3% to 6.14 lakh units, up 16% in value to Rs 8.4 lakh crore: CREDAI
Housing sales across India’s top 50 cities fell 3 per cent last year to 6.14 lakh units while it rose 16 per cent value-wise to Rs 8.46 lakh crore, according to CREDAI and Liases Foras.

On Friday, realtors’ apex body The Confederation of Real Estate Developers’ Associations of India (CREDAI) and research firm Liases Foras, released a report on residential real estate trends across 50 major cities in India.

The report highlighted the continued resilience of the housing market, with strong value growth driven by rising buyer aspirations, increasing premiumisation of housing demand and sustained infrastructure-led urban development.

As per the data, the housing sales across primary markets of Indian 50 major cities fell 3 per cent to 6,14,235 units in 2025 from 6,33,134 units in the preceding year.

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In value terms, sales grew to Rs 8,46,648 crore last year, an increase of 16 per cent from 7,29,112 crore during 2024 calendar year.


Shekhar Patel, President of CREDAI, said: “The 2025 numbers mark more than a statistical milestone, they reflect a fundamental shift in how India lives, invests and aspires. When 78 per cent of sales value comes from homes priced above Rs 1 crore and ultra-luxury alone drives over half the value, it signals rising household wealth, maturing investor confidence and the success of urban infrastructure initiatives”.
He noted that Tier-2, 3 and 4 cities are no longer peripheral and they are emerging as engines of economic opportunity.Pankaj Kapoor, Managing Director of Liases Foras, said: “Top metro cities continue to dominate India’s housing market in 2025 in sales, value and supply. However, Tier-2 cities are increasingly emerging as important growth centres in the residential real estate sector.

Better connectivity, expanding employment hubs, and infrastructure-driven initiatives are boosting housing demand in these markets for both end-users and investors, he added.

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Country star Brantley Gilbert enters growing non-alcoholic beer market

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Country star Brantley Gilbert enters growing non-alcoholic beer market

Brantley Gilbert, the seven-time No.1 country hit singer-songwriter, has experienced more than one occasion in his life where his 14-year sobriety felt like sitting on the sidelines.

“Nothing beats a cold beer when you’re grilling out or watching a game with your buddies, your family. And as a country music songwriter, we write about cold beer in every other song,” Gilbert told Fox News Digital.

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“This is a chance for those of us that have taken alcohol out of our lives for one reason or another to drink a cold beer,” he said, “and share one with our buddies.”

America’s oldest and youngest generations are drinking less, with U.S. alcohol use hitting its lowest point in nearly a century, according to the 2025 Gallup Consumption Habits survey. Only 54% of adults reported using alcohol last year, with half of 18-to-34-year-olds not drinking at all — a steep drop from the 72% of young adults who did two decades ago.

SOBER CURIOUS FOR THE SUMMER? T.H.C.-INFUSED BEVERAGES ARE ON A HIGH

The desire to cut back on alcoholic beverages has poured into a budding market of non-alcoholic beers and wines, which Gilbert is now proudly a part of.

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Brantley Gilbert with RAB ZERO non-alcoholic beer

Country music star Brantley Gilbert speaks to Fox News Digital about why he’s investing in Real American Beer’s first non-alcoholic offering. (FOXBusiness)

Going from fan to owner, the country music powerhouse is Real American Beer’s (RAB) latest major equity partner. He’s spearheading the launch of RAB Zero, the brand’s first non-alcoholic drink that promises “real beer energy” without compromise.

For every case that’s sold, RAB plans to donate $1 to the U.S.O.

“The RAB folks are just next-level people, and they’re patriots,” Gilbert said. “They’re about God, family and country, and that’s easy to get on board with for me.”

Real American Beer aims to set itself apart from rivals by making the beer a part of a meaningful experience rather than focusing on the product itself. The brand launched in 2024 and pays homage to its late founder, Hulk Hogan.

Led by former Anheuser-Busch InBev executive Terri Francis, he previously told FOX Business that it had been Hogan’s dream to “be bigger than Bud Light” before his death in July 2025 at age 71, just over a year after launching the company.

“[Growing] up, watching wrestling, I thought Hulk Hogan was almost the second coming, and getting a chance to meet him and knowing what he was up to with Real American Freestyle, I got a chance to kind of become friends with him and writing the theme song for that, what he wanted it to sound like,” Gilbert reflected. “Really, you know, the conversation had to develop into, what do you want this brand to be about? And obviously that was just all-American.”

“I don’t really partner with people that I don’t believe in or products that I don’t use myself,” he added. “Having a stake in the game obviously adds to the equation.”

Gilbert, who has been sober since December 2011, explained why he wanted a product that allowed people to participate in “beer moments” without alcohol.

“I finally came to terms with the fact that I’m allergic to alcohol, like I break out in handcuffs and bad decisions,” Gilbert said.

“It’s not that I can’t drink. It’s that I choose not to, you know what I mean? It’s a choice. And I think people are a little more respectful towards that… This is an option… for beer lovers like myself to still pop a top and cheers your buddies and have a cold beer without having all the bad decisions, all the negative things that come with it.”

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The country music star views this partnership as a way to carry the torch for his late friend while celebrating his own personal redemption as a married dad of three.

He also sees 2026 as “a hell of a ride,” even teasing that more new music is coming.

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“My story is one of those being blessed… My wife coming back in the picture and giving me a chance to love her after not seeing or speaking to each other for six or seven years,” Gilbert said. “It is this kind of redemption story that, without, frankly, I would be not in a great place.”

“Years down the road, God willing, we are cheers-ing and celebrating not just the success story of this brand, but the success story of American patriotism.”

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FOX Business’ Daniella Genovese contributed to this report.

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Better Home & Finance Stock: Tremendous Growth Needed To Justify Valuation (NASDAQ:BETR)

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Better Home & Finance Stock: Tremendous Growth Needed To Justify Valuation (NASDAQ:BETR)

This article was written by

Over fifteen years of experience making contrarian bets based on my macro view and stock-specific turnaround stories to garner outsized returns with a favorable risk/reward profile. If you want me to cover a specific stock or have a question for an article, just let me know!

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Quant Small Cap Fund : HDFC Bank and Jio Financial Services among stocks bought and sold in February

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Quant Small Cap Fund : HDFC Bank and Jio Financial Services among stocks bought and sold in February

Quant Small Cap Fund added HDFC Bank and others, trimmed Jio Financial, and exited Stanley Lifestyles in February.

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