Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024

A top investor is now taking aim at Alphabet, saying it has too many employees, pays them too much, and it’s burning money on bad bets.


Google CEO Sundar Pichai speaks during Google I/O 2016 at Shoreline Amphitheatre on May 19, 2016 in Mountain View, California. The annual Google I/O conference is runs through May 20.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai speaking during a Google event in California in 2016.
  • Major Alphabet investor TCI sent a letter to Alphabet's CEO Sundar Pichai on Tuesday.
  • The letter urged the company to cut costs in part by reducing headcount and lowering compensation.
  • It also called for losses to be "reduced dramatically" in Waymo, Alphabet's self-driving car unit.

TCI Fund Management, one of Alphabet's top investors, sent a letter to the company on Tuesday urging it to slash costs by reducing headcount, lowering worker compensation, and curbing losses in long term bets like Waymo, its self-driving car unit.

The letter noted that "the cost base of Alphabet is too high and management needs to take aggressive action."

The London-based hedge fund has been a major stakeholder in Alphabet since 2017, and said its total shares in the company stack up to $6 billion. Despite the scale of its investments in Alphabet, the Wall Street Journal noted that it is "rare for big technology companies to face campaigns from activists such as TCI."

The letter was addressed directly to Alphabet's CEO Sundar Pichai from TCI's managing director, Christopher Hohn, who is known in institutional investment circles for his activism.


Chris Hohn square
TCI's Christopher Hohn.
Hohn noted that TCI was particularly concerned with how bloated Alphabet had gotten over the years. According to TCI's calculations, which were illustrated via color-coded graphs, the company's headcount has grown at a rate of 20% per year since 2017.

Over that time, Alphabet's employees have more than doubled from just above 80,000 to close to 190,000.

"The company has too many employees and the cost per employee is too high," Hohn advised.

"It's a poorly kept secret in Silicon Valley that companies ranging from Google to Meta to Twitter to Uber could achieve similar levels of revenue with far fewer people," Hohn added, quoting Silicon Valley investor Brad Gerstner. He also noted that TCI had held conversations with former Alphabet executives.

TCI was not only vexed by Alphabet's headcount, but also by the company's above-market compensation rates. Hohn pointed out that median compensation at Apple was 153% higher than the 20 largest listed companies in the country.

"We acknowledge that Alphabet employs some of the most talented and brightest engineers, but these represent only a fraction of the employee base. Many employees are performing general sales, marketing and administrative jobs, which should be compensated in-line with other technology companies," Hohn wrote.

Alphabet has announced that it would be pulling back on hiring this year amidst increasing losses. However, it has yet to join fellow tech giants like Meta, Twitter, and Amazon who have or are planning to institute massive layoffs this year.

At the same time, Pichai has echoed TCI's sentiments on employee productivity. At an all-hands meeting in August, he reportedly told employees that "there are real concerns that our productivity as a whole is not where it needs to be for the headcount we have."

TCI concerns, however, extended beyond Alphabet's over-compensated and underperforming employees.

The fund called for the company to reduce its losses in Other Bets, its division where it invests in early stage projects that have the potential to bring in big returns, like Waymo, biotech company Calico, and later-stage venture firm CapitalG.

The payoff, however, has been underwhelming. In late October, the company reported $4.5 billion in losses from "Other Bets."

TCI specifically pushed Alphabet to cull its investment in Waymo. "Unfortunately, enthusiasm for self-driving cars has collapsed and competitors have exited the market," Hohn wrote. "Waymo has not justified its excessive investment and its losses should be reduced dramatically."

Alphabet did not immediately respond to Insider's request for a comment.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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By: [email protected] (Lakshmi Varanasi)
Title: A top investor is now taking aim at Alphabet, saying it has too many employees, pays them too much, and it’s burning money on bad bets.
Sourced From: www.businessinsider.com/alphabet-investor-calls-on-company-to-cut-headcount-and-pay-2022-11
Published Date: Tue, 15 Nov 2022 20:33:06 +0000