UK's Ocado to Cut 1,000 Jobs in Cost Saving Drive

FILE PHOTO: An Ocado grocery delivery van is driven along a street in London, Britain, March 25, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: An Ocado grocery delivery van is driven along a street in London, Britain, March 25, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
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UK's Ocado to Cut 1,000 Jobs in Cost Saving Drive

FILE PHOTO: An Ocado grocery delivery van is driven along a street in London, Britain, March 25, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: An Ocado grocery delivery van is driven along a street in London, Britain, March 25, 2023. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo

Ocado, the British technology and online grocery group, plans to cut about 1,000 jobs as it targets savings of ‌150 ‌million pounds ($203 ‌million) in ⁠technology and support ⁠costs, its boss said on Thursday.

"It's about 1,000 people, it's ⁠less than 5% ‌of ‌our global workforce," ‌CEO Tim Steiner ‌told Reuters after Ocado published full-year results.

He said about ‌half of the job losses ⁠are ⁠from Ocado's research and development team. Two thirds of the job losses would be in the UK.



China's Baidu Revenue Falls 4% as AI Cloud Growth Fails to Offset Ad Weakness

FILE PHOTO: A Baidu logo and a decreasing stock graph appear in this illustration taken August 18, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A Baidu logo and a decreasing stock graph appear in this illustration taken August 18, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
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China's Baidu Revenue Falls 4% as AI Cloud Growth Fails to Offset Ad Weakness

FILE PHOTO: A Baidu logo and a decreasing stock graph appear in this illustration taken August 18, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A Baidu logo and a decreasing stock graph appear in this illustration taken August 18, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

China's largest search engine operator Baidu reported 4% revenue drop for its December quarter on Thursday, as the hit from persistent weakness in its mainstay advertising business, which was cushioned by strong growth in its cloud business.

Baidu, like other tech giants in China, has invested heavily in building out its artificial intelligence capabilities, helping the tech firm capture enterprise demand as companies increasingly adopt AI to speed ‌up operations ‌and productivity.

US-listed shares of Baidu were ‌down ⁠nearly 3% in premarket ⁠trading.

Strength in its cloud business has helped Baidu offset weakness in its advertising unit - its primary revenue generator — which has struggled to rebound in a highly competitive ad market. Weak consumer demand and a prolonged property-sector crisis have hobbled China's economy, denting advertiser spending.

Revenue from Baidu's core ⁠AI-powered business, which includes its cloud infrastructure ‌unit, AI applications and robotaxi division, ‌jumped to 11 billion yuan ($1.61 billion) in the fourth quarter ‌and accounted for 43% of the company's general business ‌revenue.

AI has become the "new core of Baidu," said Baidu CEO Robin Li, adding that the company's cloud services were gaining increasing enterprise recognition while its AI apps such as the Miaoda vibe-coding ‌platform have gained traction among users.

The company reported total revenue of 32.74 billion ⁠yuan for the ⁠quarter ended December, compared with analysts' average estimate of 32.62 billion yuan, according to data compiled by LSEG.

Its net income for the quarter was 1.8 billion yuan with earnings per share at 10.62 yuan, compared with analyst's estimate of 9.25 yuan, Reuters said.

Earlier this month, Baidu announced a new $5 billion share repurchase program and its first-ever dividend policy, highlighting increased focus on shareholder returns. The company said on Thursday it expects to pay out its first dividend by the end of this year.


ByteDance's AI Chatbot Doubao Wins China Holiday Battle with 100 Million Users

FILE PHOTO: ByteDance logo is seen in this illustration taken February 8, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: ByteDance logo is seen in this illustration taken February 8, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
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ByteDance's AI Chatbot Doubao Wins China Holiday Battle with 100 Million Users

FILE PHOTO: ByteDance logo is seen in this illustration taken February 8, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: ByteDance logo is seen in this illustration taken February 8, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

ByteDance's Doubao chatbot attracted over 100 million daily active users during China's Lunar New Year holiday, winning an AI battle that saw the country's largest tech companies spend billions to acquire new users, a private survey showed.

The Spring Festival is China's longest and busiest holiday period, which officially began this year on February 15 and lasted for nine days.

It has become one of the most important periods for Chinese tech companies to launch campaigns to capture ‌market attention and promote ‌consumer-facing AI products.

The Doubao app surpassed 100 million ‌daily ⁠active users (DAU) on ⁠February 16, about four times the levels seen in early February, according to data published on Wednesday by AICPB.com, which tracks the performance of Chinese AI chatbots.

The app was likely helped by its partnership with CCTV's Spring Festival Gala, one of China's most-watched programs which was broadcast on February 16. Doubao fielded over 1.9 billion AI-related queries during the show, according to ByteDance.

Alibaba, despite spending ⁠3 billion yuan ($436.95 million) to promote its Qwen app by ‌subsidizing orders for items such as bubble ‌tea placed via the app, saw the chatbot’s DAU peak at 30 million on ‌New Year's Eve, the lowest reading among the three chatbots in the survey. ‌In early February, Qwen had less than 10 million DAUs, the data showed.

Tencent promoted its Yuanbao chatbot with a 1 billion yuan coupon giveaway campaign, which helped the app grow its DAU steadily from 20 million in early February to peak ‌at 50 million on February 16, the survey showed.

ByteDance, Alibaba and Tencent did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for ⁠comments.

All three ⁠apps, however, saw their DAU drop after the peak, with Yuanbao’s DAU falling the sharpest after its campaign wound down. Qwen suffered the smallest drop in DAU and had by February 21 managed to maintain 22 million users.

"Doubao gained the most visibility through the Spring Festival Gala, Yuanbao attracted users quickly with cash incentives, but both face user retention challenges after the holiday peak," AICPB said. “Qwen, however, showed the strongest retention by focusing on practical, everyday use cases."

Alibaba announced before the holiday that it had added AI agent functions to its Qwen app. Users of the Qwen app eventually placed nearly 200 million orders for goods - including eggs, flight tickets and bubble tea - on behalf of users during the holiday season, AICPB’s data showed.


AI Disruption Prompts Australia's WiseTech to Cut a Third of Global Workforce

FILE PHOTO: Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of the words "Artificial Intelligence AI" in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of the words "Artificial Intelligence AI" in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
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AI Disruption Prompts Australia's WiseTech to Cut a Third of Global Workforce

FILE PHOTO: Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of the words "Artificial Intelligence AI" in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of the words "Artificial Intelligence AI" in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Australian software firm WiseTech Global will axe about 2,000 jobs, nearly a third of its global workforce, in a two-year restructuring that could rank among the country's largest artificial intelligence-linked job reductions.

Shares of the company, which announced an estimate-beating first-half profit on Wednesday, closed 11.1% higher at A$47.74, while Australia's benchmark S&P ASX 200 rose 1.2%.

The layoffs highlight how quickly AI is reshaping workplaces globally, as fast-improving automation tools ‌take over ‌routine administrative work and handle complex coding tasks ‌with increasing ⁠speed and precision, driving ⁠widespread adoption.

Last month, Amazon announced 16,000 job cuts worldwide in a second round of redundancies at the tech giant in three months, adding to a wave of redundancies by US companies across sectors this year.

WiseTech, which makes shipping and logistics management software, plans to integrate AI into its customer software as well as internal operations, affecting around 29% ⁠of its global workforce of around 7,000 across 40 ‌countries.

The cuts could shrink some ‌teams by half, starting with product and development, and customer service roles across ‌the organization. One of the divisions affected will be WiseTech's US cloud ‌computing arm, E2open, acquired in August for $2.1 billion, which may see cuts of up to 50%.

"Software development has experienced its most significant shift in decades," Reuters quoted WiseTech Chief Executive Officer Zubin Appoo as saying.

"The era of manually writing code ‌as the core act of engineering is over."

WiseTech, founded more than three decades ago, reported first-half underlying net ⁠profit of $114.5 ⁠million, 6% ahead of market consensus, and announced an interim dividend of 6.8 cents while reaffirming its full-year outlook.

Despite the day's surge, WiseTech's shares remain 68% below their November 2024 peak, as allegations surrounding founder and former CEO Richard White, including claims of payments to an alleged former lover, fueled an investor exodus. Concerns around how AI would affect the software maker also kept the stock under pressure.

"With recent share price weakness was more governance-driven than fundamental and with the fiscal 2026 guidance reaffirmed, the underlying trajectory remains sustainable despite near-term disruption," said Marc Jocum, senior product and investment strategist at Global X ETFs.