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Twitch, Unity Layoffs Keep Grim Gaming Industry Trend Alive in 2024 - Decrypt

decrypt.co 10-01-2024 07:50 3 Minutes reading
Amazon-owned livestreaming platform Twitch made dramatic cuts Wednesday, laying off about 35% of its staff. But Twitch isn't the only gaming company to reveal layoffs barely more than a week into 2024, continuing a grim trend from last year. Roughly 500 employees were impacted by Twitch's layoffs, and CEO Dan Clancy explained in a blog post that the company was simply too big to meet its financial goals. Bloomberg first reported the news Tuesday ahead of Twitch's official announcement. "Our organization is still meaningfully larger than it needs to be," said Clancy, explaining that he's spent the past year trying to make Twitch "a more sustainable business" and that other methods of cost-cutting weren't enough. Twitch's layoffs come as part of an effort to set the company up for longer-term success, its CEO said. Instead of taking its previous optimistic approach, Clancy is now resizing Twitch for more "conservative predictions." "This decision, while incredibly difficult and painful, is necessary to ensure that we can continue to serve our streamers sustainably," Clancy said. Twitch's Chief Customer Officer Doug Scott called the layoffs "gut-wrenching." "I have total confidence in the long term strength and potential of livestreaming and Twitch's role within it," Scott wrote. "While today's news is gut-wrenching, there is a great future ahead for the business." But streamer Ben "CohhCarnage" Cassell, who has 1.7 million followers on Twitch, raised concerns about how Wednesday's layoffs might impact streamers -- the biggest of whom liaise with Twitch staff. "There is almost zero doubt this will dramatically affect our lives on the platform," Cassell said. Twitch parent company Amazon is also laying off "several hundreds" of staff within its Amazon Prime Video and MGM Studios divisions, The Information first reported. Twitch also ended its Crown channel last year, which affected roughly 180 employees, and the company laid off 400 staff in March 2023. Twitch also announced in December that it would shut down its service in South Korea due to it being "prohibitively expensive" to operate in the region. But Twitch and its media siblings at Amazon are far from the only firms seeing layoffs already this year. Game engine firm Unity announced this week that it is laying off another 25% of its company, or 1,800 jobs, as part of a broader "company reset." This is more than Unity laid off last year. A U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing states that Unity's layoffs this month are occurring to "position itself for long-term and profitable growth." Like Twitch, Unity also had a difficult 2023. While Unity expanded its Web3 integrations last year, it also announced a new fee structure that enraged game developers, causing the firm to apologize and walk back part of its fee announcement a few weeks later. Shortly after, Unity's longtime CEO John Riccitiello resigned. And Unity had the most layoffs in 2023 of any game company, cutting about 1,165 jobs. None of this is good news for the broader video game industry, which saw a staggering 10,500 layoffs in 2023 and 8,500 in 2022, the Game File newsletter reported. Despite being less than two weeks into 2024, Stray Souls game studio Jukai has already announced its closure, TikTok parent company ByteDance is looking to sell its video game business, Bossa Studios laid off one-third of its staff, and Archiact -- the studio behind Doom 3: VR Edition -- is also laying off staff. One game industry layoffs tracker puts the tally of layoffs so far this year at approximately 2,320 people as of the 10th day of 2024.

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11.01.24 07:57
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Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S. are off to a raucous start. It's only midday, and already the 11 spot Bitcoin ETFs just yesterday approved by the SEC have combined for $1.9 billion worth of trading volume, exceeding analyst expectations. Despite spiking to nearly $49,000 just after markets opened in the U.S., Bitcoin was relatively subdued on Thursday. At the time of writing, it was changing hands at $46,610.54, according to CoinGecko. BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) and the Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Trust (FBTC) have far and away led the pack, accounting for 41% and 27% of that volume, respectively. These two ETFs alone have generated $1.3 billion in trading volume so far. Among the non-Wall Street set, the ARK 21Shares Bitcoin ETF (ARKB) has done roughly $208 million -- about 13% -- of total volume by 1 p.m. ET on Thursday. In October, when the race to offer a Bitcoin ETF seemed to be just heating up, Adam Guren, the co-founder of crypto hedge fund Hunting Hill Digital, told Decrypt that blowout ETF launches aren't all that common. "Even attaining $500 million in day-one inflows as a noteworthy challenge," he said. Last week, Dave Nadig of VettaFi and co-author of "A Comprehensive Guide to Exchange-Traded Funds" told Decrypt that if the approved funds launched with the Grayscale Bitcoin Trust in the mix, then GBTC might soak up most of the volume -- but not for the reasons the firm might want. "Where the volume shows up is a little bit of a secret sauce, mystical union quest," Nadig said last week, adding that "if GBTC is included in that initial launch, it could get all the volume because there are a lot of people who are already in it that may want to unload it." The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) has accounted for $217 million worth of the opening day volume, approximately 12% of the total that's traded so far. But GBTC isn't a perfect 1:1 comparison to all the ETFs that just began trading today. GBTC began as an investment product available to accredited investors in 2013. As part of the SEC approvals yesterday, Grayscale was allowed to convert GBTC into a spot Bitcoin ETF. The Securities and Exchange Commission made history yesterday afternoon when it approved rules changes that would allow the Bitcoin ETFs to trade on the NYSE Arca, Nasdaq, and Cboe. The industry has been pushing for such products to be available to U.S. investors for the better part of a decade. That's because spot Bitcoin ETFs offer a way for investors to get exposure to BTC as an asset without having to actually buy and store the cryptocurrency. But the ease with which investors can now gain exposure to BTC through ETFs comes at a price. By design, exchange-traded funds (ETFs) charge a sponsor's fee -- which pays for all the overhead taken on by the issuer and management of assets. In the days leading up to yesterday's SEC approval, issuers played a dizzying game of fee limbo. After initially setting its fee at 0.30%, which analysts said was very competitive, BlackRock turned up the heat on...

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