Now is a great time for an executive to blame AI disruption for a bad quarter and a poor outlook.
Everyone seems to be doing the same.
Quick insight: If there has been one constant on earnings calls this year, it's talk of AI disrupting the way companies do business.
The Deutsche Bank team found that mentions of AI disruptions during earnings calls jumped to a record 780 in the first half of 2026, a 310% surge from the second half of 2025.
In the first half of the year alone, there were more mentions of AI disruptions than in the previous three years combined.
The reality: The growing impact of AI can be seen in Big Tech layoffs.
Billionaire Jack Dorsey's Block (XYZ) slashed 40% of its staff. With billionaire founder Larry Ellison still pulling the strings, Oracle (ORCL) reportedly laid off up to 30,000 workers across the US, Mexico, and other countries on April 1.
Amazon (AMZN) has reportedly slashed 16,000 workers this year as part of its AI efficiency push. Coinbase (COIN) announced a 14% reduction in force in May. Cloudflare (NET) recently cut bait with 20% of its workforce, while Meta (META) cut 10% of its employee count.
"I think once we realized it was something we had to do, we made the decision it was the kindest thing that we could do for the team to do as early as possible," Cloudflare co-founder and CEO Matthew Prince told Yahoo Finance.
Bottom line: Expect to hear more AI disruption talk when second quarter earnings season begins shortly. Execs won't be able to escape it!
Brian Sozzi* is Yahoo Finance's Executive Editor, host of the 'Power Players With Brian Sozzi' podcast and a member of Yahoo Finance's editorial leadership team. Follow Sozzi on X** @BrianSozzi**,** Instagram**, and** LinkedIn**. Tips on stories? Email brian.sozzi@yahoofinance.com.*
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