Several European companies have frozen hiring or cut jobs this year, citing difficult economic conditions exacerbated by U.S. tariffs.
Here are some of the companies that announced layoffs, according to a Reuters report quoting regulatory filings and company websites.
CAR AND CAR PARTS MAKERS
* BOSCH: The German home appliance manufacturer will cut 13,000 jobs, it said on September 25.
* CONTINENTAL: The German tire maker plans to cut 1,500 additional jobs at its ContiTech rubber and plastics division, a works council source said on November 24, on top of the 10,000 job cuts announced group-wide in restructuring efforts.
* DAIMLER TRUCK: The truckmaker confirmed media reports on August 1 that it would cut 2,000 jobs across its plants in the U.S. and Mexico, on top of the previously announced 5,000 job cuts in Germany.
* MAN: The German truckmaker plans to cut around 2,300 jobs over the next decade, a spokesperson said on November 20.
* RENAULT: The French carmaker confirmed on October 4 it was planning cost cuts but said it had no figures to report yet, after a newsletter reported it would cut 3,000 jobs by year-end in support services at its headquarters and other locations worldwide.
* STELLANTIS: The automaker expanded its voluntary redundancy scheme for Italy, bringing the total planned workforce reduction to almost 2,500 in 2025, it said on June 10.
* VOLKSWAGEN: The company’s CFO said on April 30 it had cut headcount in Germany by around 7,000 since starting cost savings in late 2023.
* VOLVO CARS: The Swedish carmaker will cut 3,000 mostly white-collar jobs as part of a wider restructuring, it said on May 26.
BANKS
* COMMERZBANK: The German bank said on May 14 it had agreed on terms to cut around 3,900 jobs by 2028.
* LLOYDS: The British bank will consider the dismissal of around half of 3,000 staff to cut costs, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters on September 4.
* ABN AMRO: The Dutch bank plans to cut 5,200 jobs by 2028, it said on November 25.
ENERGY
* OMV: The Austrian oil and gas company plans to cut 2,000 positions, or a twelfth of its global workforce, the Kurier newspaper reported on September 4.
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INDUSTRIALS AND ENGINEERING
* SIKA: The Swiss industrial and construction chemicals maker said on October 24 it would cut up to 1,500 jobs in persistently weak markets such as China.
* STMICROELECTRONICS: The French-Italian chipmaker’s CEO said on June 4 that he expected 5,000 staff to leave the company in the next three years, including 2,800 job cuts announced in 2025.
CONSUMER GOODS
* BURBERRY: The British luxury brand will shed 1,700 jobs or around a fifth of its global workforce, it said on May 14.
* LVMH: The Financial Times reported on May 1 that the luxury group’s wine and spirits unit Moet Hennessy would cut its workforce by about 1,200 employees.
* NESTLE: The group will cut 16,000 jobs, or 5.8% of its staff, it said on October 16.
OTHERS
*JUST EAT TAKEAWAY: The food delivery company’s German unit Lieferando plans to cut 2,000 jobs from end-2025, the company said on July 17.
* LUFTHANSA: The German airline group said on September 28 it would cut 4,000 administrative jobs by 2030.
* KUEHNE+NAGEL: The Swiss freight forwarder will target 1,500 jobs under a cost-cutting programme to combat margin pressures and overcapacity, it said on October 23.
* NOVO NORDISK: The Danish pharmaceutical company will cut 9,000 jobs globally, it said on September 10.
* ORSTED: The Danish wind power group said on October 9 it would cut around 2,000 jobs by the end of 2027, a quarter of its workforce.
* TELEFONICA: The Spanish telecoms company will cut 5,040 jobs in Spain, affecting up to around 20% of its staff in the country, trade union UGT said on November 24.