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Walmart Cuts Staffing Levels at Some U.S. E-Commerce Warehouses

The Bentonville, Arkansas-based company is paring jobs as it bolsters warehouse automation to reduce the cost of handling online purchases. The retailer has so far avoided the kind of mass layoffs underway at rival Amazon.com Inc., which this week said it would slash payrolls by another 9,000 jobs in addition to 18,000 recent cuts.

(Bloomberg)—Walmart Inc. is cutting staffing levels at some e-commerce fulfillment centers in the US as the nation’s largest private-sector employer steps up investment in automation.

The retailer is working with the affected employees to find other positions at Walmart, according to a company statement Thursday. In a regulatory filing, Walmart provided advance notice of the cuts to 201 employees in Pedricktown, New Jersey. Reuters reported earlier that the potential impact extends to hundreds of other employees in California, Florida, Pennsylvania and Texas.

The move “was not made lightly, and we’re working closely with affected associates to help them understand what career options may be available at other Walmart locations,” the company said in an emailed statement.

The Bentonville, Arkansas-based company is paring jobs as it bolsters warehouse automation to reduce the cost of handling online purchases. The retailer has so far avoided the kind of mass layoffs underway at rival Amazon.com Inc., which this week said it would slash payrolls by another 9,000 jobs in addition to 18,000 recent cuts.

Walmart said last month it would close three of its 11 US technology hubs and require affected workers to relocate. Employees who decide to quit will receive severance, the company said at the time.

The retailer raised its starting hourly wage to $14 from $12 earlier this year. Walmart has about 1.6 million US employees.

Walmart shares climbed 1.3% at 12:52 p.m. in New York. The stock fell 1.6% this year through Wednesday, while the S&P 500 index advanced 2.5%.

© 2023 Bloomberg L.P.

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