The Forecast
Plus, credit card debt, an IPO revival and more.
View in browser
Bloomberg

Welcome back to The Forecast from Bloomberg Weekend, where we help you think about the future — from next week to next decade.

This weekend we’re looking at an AI-induced hiring pause, rising credit card delinquency in the US, and a slowdown in transatlantic travel.

(By the way, two weeks ago we warned about the return of the screwworm to the US; this week the US paused cattle imports from Mexico.)

The AI Hiring Pause Is Here

When Microsoft cut roughly 6,000 jobs this past week, it exposed a telling contradiction: While heading into a major boom in the software market, one of the world’s biggest tech companies is laying off people in product management and software engineering.

The cuts highlight the risk that AI poses to coding jobs, as Bloomberg News reported. Microsoft hasn’t announced a hiring freeze, but it finds itself navigating the same strange moment as the rest of the corporate world: a technology boom in the form of AI, with a backdrop of massive economic and policy uncertainty.

“Microsoft’s layoffs in software engineering and AI roles are a bellwether for how generative AI is beginning to reshape work,” said Molly Kinder, a researcher at the Brookings Institution who studies AI and labor. “Coding is at the leading edge of AI integration, so it’s no surprise that engineers are among the first to feel the impact. They’re the first — but won’t be the last.”

It’s not just Microsoft: Norway’s sovereign wealth fund said this week that it did not expect to add to its headcount, due to AI — echoing a sentiment shared by tech CEOs at companies including Shopify and DuoLingo. For many companies, AI-driven productivity improvements seem more appealing right now than hiring

Alphabet and Microsoft have both said that AI now writes or assists 30% or more of their code. “I might argue we’ve seen peak employment in the Magnificent 7,” Jeffrey Bussgang, a venture capitalist at Flybridge Capital Partners, told me in April. “We may see that all of these companies never grow headcount again. That they just grow 20-30% a year of revenue with flat headcount.”

It’s clear from mentions of generative AI in recent earnings calls that a lot of companies are already using the technology to make their operations more efficient, especially for coding, research, customer service and marketing. 

A few examples:

  • Intuit in February: “We're also seeing improved coding productivity with up to 40% faster coding using GenAI code assistance.”

  • Expedia in May: “Our marketing team is using generative creative AI both to make their marketing more effective, and also to save time.”

  • Coca-Cola in February: “This year, for the first time, our Coca-Cola Christmas ad was created with generative AI, combining emerging technology with human creativity, which allowed us to produce the ad faster and at a lower cost.” 

  • Palantir in May: “We're not talking about co-pilots that make you 50% more productive, we're talking about agents that make you 50 times more productive.”

Global uncertainty around tariffs and the macroeconomy could further speed this kind of AI adoption. Uncertainty tends to weaken hiring and some research suggests that downturns prompt firms to invest more in IT — both because they have more spare capacity and because they want to make their operations more efficient. Companies that might otherwise be expanding and hiring may opt to keep their options open, and pursue the relatively cheap, flexible path of pushing AI efficiency.

“Talking to tech firms I have repeatedly heard discussions about reducing hiring or absolute headcount because of AI,” says Nicholas Bloom, an economist at Stanford. “Absolutely the macro situation will make this worse. Business sentiment has taken a dive with the tariff chaos and broader DOGE churn. So firms are slowing on hiring.”

It’s too soon to know whether automation is proceeding faster because of macro uncertainty, and what that would mean for jobs like coding. But if AI proves capable of automating work cheaply and is spurred on by companies’ reluctance to hire in the face of uncertainty, it could amount to a sort of perfect storm for some segments of the labor market. “Winter is not coming yet,” says Bloom. “But this is a worrying few whiffs of snow.”

— Walter Frick, Bloomberg Weekend

Predictions

The IPO revival is starting:European stock exchanges could see a pickup in initial public offerings in the following weeks… [with] at least five sizable companies… considering a first-time share sale.” Meanwhile in Hong Kong, Chinese EV battery maker CATL is poised to raise $4 billion. — Bloomberg News

The US-China trade truce reduces the chance of recession:Forecasters generally agreed Monday’s announcement points to a better, though still subdued, outlook for the US economy this year.” Steve Cohen now puts the chance of recession at 45% and Jamie Dimon says he “wouldn’t take it off the table.” — Bloomberg News 

US levies on Chinese products imposed this year will likely hold at 30% through late 2025, according to a Bloomberg survey.

Alphabet would be more valuable broken up: Gil Luria, an analyst at D.A. Davidson, says the current structure “assigns zero value to Waymo and [its chip business], and severely undervalues YouTube, Cloud and Network.” If Alphabet pursued a breakup, he says it would be his top megacap pick. — Ryan Vlastelica, Bloomberg News (The chance of a forced breakup on Kalshi is 39% as of this writing.)

Extra heat from data centers will power more homes: “The biggest project with heat recovery technology anywhere in the world is underway just outside Helsinki. Microsoft is building a cluster of data centers that, when completed, should supply heating to 40% of Espoo, Finland’s second-largest city. That’s about 100,000 homes.”  — Lars Paulsson, Kari Lundgren, and Kati Pohjanpalo, Bloomberg CityLab

Transatlantic travel will slow this summer, says aviation analytics firm Cirium. But with gas prices falling, Americans are planning more road trips instead. — Bloomberg News

South Korea will be the big winner from nuclear power’s comeback. — Heesu Lee and Will Wade, Bloomberg Businessweek

Keep an Eye On

More US Households Are Falling Behind on Debts

More Americans are falling behind on their debt payments, according to new data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The share of credit card balances at least three months delinquent rose to its highest level in 14 years, approaching its level during the Great Recession.

Overall credit card balances fell, but there was almost a one-percentage-point increase in the share of people who couldn’t pay. In other words, US households are borrowing less on their credit cards, in the aggregate, but the portion of borrowers who can’t pay their debts is rising.

Credit cards weren’t the only debt measure to deteriorate. The share of unpaid debt balances rose across the board last quarter, led by student loans, which were not reported to credit agencies for the last five years due to Covid-era emergency relief measures. The share of seriously delinquent student loans (90 days or more) jumped to 7.74% as the reporting freeze ended, but came in at 23.7% among borrowers who are in active repayment cycles. 

Across the board, the data shows that millions of US consumers are in poor financial health. Nearly one in 20 have an account in third-party collections.

— Alex Tanzi, Bloomberg Economics

What Are the Chances...

26%
The chance that Russia and Ukraine agree to a ceasefire or a peace agreement before the end of the year, according to the Rand Forecasting Initiative, a crowd-forecasting platform run by the US think tank. Polymarket puts the chance of a ceasefire this year somewhat higher, at 45%. Forecasts as of 2 p.m. on Friday.

Weekend Reads

Related Stories
No One Is Certain Social Media Can Swing Voting Results
The Price of Oil Has Always Been Both Personal and Political
Why OpenAI Is Fueling the Arms Race It Once Warned Against
Tariffs Got You Down? Brush Off the 1930s Playbook.
In Big Cities, Peace and Quiet Is Becoming a Perk Worth Paying For

Week Ahead

Sunday: Romania holds its presidential runoff (read more about its disinformation controversy here); Poland holds the first round of its presidential election; Portugal holds a general election. 

Monday: China releases April economic activity data; Chile reports GDP. 

Tuesday: Australia’s central bank is expected to cut rates while Nigeria’s is expected to hold; Canada reports CPI; Home Depot reports earnings; G7 finance ministers and central bank heads meet in Canada; CATL begins trading in Hong Kong; the Qatar Economic Forum begins in Doha; Google’s I/O event begins.

Wednesday: Indonesia’s central bank will likely cut rates; the UK reports CPI; Target and Baidu report earnings.  

Thursday: Mexico reports GDP. 

Friday: Germany reports GDP; Japan reports CPI; US reports new home sales.

Also: US President Donald Trump said he would set tariff rates for trading partners “over the next two to three weeks.”

Have a great Sunday and a productive week.

—Walter Frick and Kira Bindrim, Bloomberg Weekend; Alex Tanzi, Bloomberg Economics

More from Bloomberg

Enjoying The Forecast? Check out these newsletters:

Explore all newsletters at Bloomberg.com.

Follow Us

Like getting this newsletter? Subscribe to Bloomberg.com for unlimited access to trusted, data-driven journalism and subscriber-only insights.

Before it’s here, it’s on the Bloomberg Terminal. Find out more about how the Terminal delivers information and analysis that financial professionals can’t find anywhere else.