Microsoft has aggressively pushed back against reports claiming the company plans to slash up to 22,000 jobs this month, with chief communications officer Frank Shaw directly calling the speculation completely false. The rumors started when investment site TipRanks reported Microsoft was preparing for widespread January layoffs affecting Azure Cloud, Xbox, and global sales teams—potentially cutting anywhere from 11,000 to 22,000 positions. As the claims spread across social media, Shaw stepped in with a definitive response: “100 percent made up / speculative / wrong,” on X.Windows Central had earlier indicated the reports were “false on the Xbox side at least,” before Shaw’s broader dismissal of the entire story.When met with skepticism in replies, he maintained his stance, telling one commenter he “eagerly awaits” the news he insists doesn’t exist.
Microsoft’s recent history with job cuts fuels speculation
The cynicism isn’t baseless. Microsoft has executed several brutal rounds of job cuts over the past year and a half, eliminating more than 15,000 positions throughout 2025. The most recent wave came last July when roughly 9,000 employees were let go, accompanied by studio closures and canceled game projects. Xbox chief Phil Spencer defended those decisions as essential for the company’s future, citing the need for greater operational efficiency.Microsoft’s $80 billion commitment to AI infrastructure—triple the previous year’s investment—has created widespread anxiety about where the money’s coming from. CEO Satya Nadella has openly called the company’s size a “massive disadvantage,” while setting what many consider unrealistic profit margins for Xbox. These factors have created a climate where layoff speculation finds fertile ground.
Why January became the focus of layoff rumors
Anonymous posts on the professional network Blind claimed middle management and legacy teams would be let go, while AI researchers would stay protected. The chatter drew additional attention from Microsoft’s history of January workforce changes, but Shaw’s strong denial suggests 2026 won’t mirror that pattern—at least not on the rumored scale. Windows Central sources had already noted rumors of early-2026 layoffs circulating internally before this latest speculation, making Shaw’s clear statement all the more meaningful for anxious employees.
