Here is what I don't get: ag is highly cyclical. Everyone knows that, and JD certainly knows it. They knew this downturn in ag would eventually happen. With killer profits the past 3 years, one would think they could weather a bad storm.
So why fire a bunch of talent if you are still projected to have the third highest net earnings in the past 5 years? $7 billion doesn't even seem like much of storm. More of a misty drizzle compared to 2023.
I did some napkin math. If the average employee costs them $200,000 per year, then they would need to let 5000 people go to increase net profits by $1 billion (never mind that the savings wont really kick in until 2025 after severance is paid). I get that a billion dollars is a billion dollars, but if that talent is good and you are still projected to make 7 billion, then why fire a bunch of people to bump profits up by just 14%?
I wonder if 2025 is projected to be much worse than that 7 billion for 2024. Net loss looming on the horizon?
H