The highest May layoff total since 2020 rattled equity futures, with AI-driven restructuring continuing to reshape the American workforce.
American employers announced 97,006 job cuts in May, a 16% jump from April’s 83,387 figure, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas. The number represents the highest May total since 2020, and S&P 500 futures dropped on the release.
The numbers in context #
April’s 83,387 cuts were themselves up 38% from March, though they were actually down 21% compared to the same month the prior year.
Year-to-date totals through April 2026 stood at 300,749. That’s roughly 50% below the same period in 2025.
No single company dominated the May headline figure. Instead, the cuts appear to be spread across multiple employers and sectors.
AI has been cited as a leading reason for cuts for three consecutive months.
Why markets reacted #
S&P 500 futures declined on the day Challenger released the data, which landed on June 4.
What this means for investors #
The year-to-date comparison to 2025 offers some comfort. At roughly half the pace of last year’s cuts, the current environment doesn’t yet suggest an employment crisis. But the acceleration from March through May, three months of escalating layoff announcements, warrants close monitoring.
The next data point to watch is the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ monthly jobs report, which will show whether Challenger’s announced cuts are translating into actual employment losses.
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