Thread regarding IBM layoffs

IBM stock nears an all-time high—and it may have something to do with its CEO replacing as many workers with AI as possible

The recent round of RAs in Consulting, Marketing and Comms, CIO, F&O, etc. due to AI is just the tip of the iceberg.

https://fortune.com/2024/03/20/ibm-stock-high-ceo-replacing-workers-ai/

By: Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez
March 20, 2024 at 5:39 PM CDT

IBM’s repositioning around AI may be paying off for its stock as it nears an all-time high amid its CEO’s ambitious plans for the technology.

The company’s shares have skyrocketed 19% since the start of the year and closed at $193.96 on Wednesday, just 6% off of its all-time high of $206.31 from 2013. Year-to-date, shares of the technology company have outpaced all of the Magnificent Seven companies, excluding red hot chipmaker Nvidia and social media giant Meta.

In an interview last year, IBM chief executive Arvind Krishna said he could see thousands of employees in “back-office” roles like human resources replaced by AI. Although he later backtracked, saying AI will create more jobs than it replaces, he again emphasized that “back office, white-collar work,” will be the first to be affected.

His own company used AI to reduce the number of employees working on relatively manual HR-related work to about 50 from 700 previously, which allowed them to focus on other things, he wrote in an April commentary piece for Fortune. And in its January fourth quarter earnings, the company said it would cut costs in 2024 by $3 billion, up from $2 billion previously, in part by laying off thousands of workers—some of which it later chalked up to AI influence.

"This rebalancing is driven by increases in productivity and our continued push to align our workforce with the skills most in demand among our clients, especially areas such as AI and hybrid cloud,” an IBM spokesperson told The Register in February.

Reminiscent of the late ‘90s, investors have clamored to cram money into nearly any company with AI involvement (so much so that the SEC has cracked down on so-called “AI washing”). So far in 2023, this trend has led to surges in the shares for Google, which has its own AI chatbot, and Microsoft, which has a profit-sharing deal with AI leader OpenAI.

But while those companies have attracted the most buzz around their AI capabilities, IBM has been bulking up its own AI products and quietly outperforming Google and Microsoft in the public market.

The 112-year-old tech company has been researching and developing its own artificial intelligence technology since the 1950s and garnered significant attention when its supercomputer Watson beat Jeopardy! champion Ken Jennings on live television in 2011. But despite its head start, IBM’s AI efforts have been outshined by OpenAI, which sparked the current AI mania when it released its chatbot ChatGPT in late 2022.

Still, through changes spearheaded by CEO Krishna, who ascended to the top job in 2020, IBM has worked to capitalize on its long-standing efforts by repositioning its business around the cloud and AI. In May, the company launched Watsonx, a platform for developing internal AI models aimed at enterprise customers. It has also dedicated more than 1,000 consultants to help customers like Spanish Bank BBVA and German software company SAP SE develop the models using their own data. Internally at IBM, three-quarters of its chip design is already done by AI, Krishna has said previously.

The company may already be gaining traction for its AI efforts. During its fourth quarter earnings call in January, Krishna said IBM’s book of business had doubled from where it stood as of the third quarter, when it was in the “low hundreds of millions.” Analysts at Morgan Stanley peg the value of its book of business at about $400 million.

“Our approach to AI for business is resonating,” added Krishna in his prepared remarks.

Morgan Stanley analysts led by Erik Woodring said in a January note that if IBM’s AI operations emulate the payoff of its other big bet, its 2019 Red Hat acquisition, the business could be worth multiple billions in just four years.

Still, the analysts cautioned that there are obstacles hampering IBM’s momentum.

“[T]he question is whether this AI spending is entirely incremental, or cannibalistic of other areas customers spend with IBM,” the analysts wrote.

by
| 2003 views | | 12 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1rEWv5Cv

12 replies (most recent on top)

Complete article below referenced in @1pjz+1rEWv5Cv comments --

https://fortune.com/2023/07/24/artificial-intelligence-ai-c-suite-jobs-ceos-safe-cultural-regulation-reasons/

A.I. might have what it takes to replace the C-suite. But experts say the top jobs are safe for cultural reasons

By: Geoff Colvin
July 24, 2023 at 9:32 AM CDT

Future CEOs and other denizens of the C-suite may look back on Nov. 30, 2022, with decidedly mixed emotions. That day, the launch of OpenAI’s ChatGPT reversed years of research findings about which workers would be most threatened by automation. For the first time, instead of low- and middle-skilled workers, it’s top executives who are seemingly in A.I. crosshairs.

“I think decisions CEOs make will be amenable to machines in the long run,” says Anton Korinek, an economist and professor at the University of Virginia’s Darden business school, who has studied artificial intelligence and its effects on labor. “It will be possible to automate everything CEOs can do. The trillion-dollar question, of course, is how long that long run is going to be.”

The reversal of research results has been startling. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development last year published a hefty study on how A.I. will affect workers, based on a survey of experts conducted before the ChatGPT launch. One conclusion: The C-suite needn’t worry. Of 48 different kinds of jobs, “top executives” ranked No. 47 on “automatability.” Only “religious workers” were less threatened.

But more recent studies paint a starkly different picture. A post-ChatGPT study by researchers at Princeton University, the University of Pennsylvania, and New York University, using U.S. Department of Labor data on more than 800 occupations, finds that chief executive jobs are in the top 12% of positions that could be significantly changed or eliminated by ChatGPT-type technology. More broadly, the study finds that “highly educated, highly paid, white-collar occupations may be most exposed to generative A.I.”

“What a contrast to what most people were worried about just a year ago,” Korinek observes. “We thought automation may affect lower-skilled physical workers. After the ChatGPT moment, it looks like just the opposite is happening.”

Could A.I. really eliminate C-suite positions, typically the highest paid jobs in business? In theory, yes. Incorporation laws don’t require companies to have anyone in those positions. Charles Elson, a corporate governance authority and an attorney at the Holland & Knight law firm, says those laws require that “the affairs of the corporation shall be under the direction of the board of directors. There’s no law that you have to have a CEO or other officers.”

In practice, however, experts say the C-suite may be more stoutly armor-plated than the academics think. In the real world, technology—even highly capable technology—isn’t the only factor determining how top-level jobs will get done. A chatbot won’t take over a C-suite job until it can clear three hurdles, none of them easy. In order, from easiest to most difficult:

It would have to do the whole job

Sounds obvious, but the difference between doing the whole job and doing almost the whole job is night and day. If A.I. can do much but not all of a CFO’s job, for example, the CFO becomes more productive and valuable. Economists would say the technology complements the worker. But if A.I. can do the whole job, the technology substitutes for the worker, and the worker is unemployed.

Today’s A.I. could be a turbocharged complement to C-suite executives. For example, Mustafa Suleyman, cofounder of the pioneering A.I. company DeepMind, has launched a startup called Inflection.ai, which offers a personal assistant that it claims will help you talk through tough decisions, come up with creative ideas, change jobs, learn a new skill, and much else. But current A.I. isn’t ready to negotiate contracts with your suppliers and customers, evaluate your employees, or allocate your company’s capital.

How long before A.I. can do all that and more, enabling it to substitute for C-suite labor rather than just complement it? It could be sooner than you expect. A.I. engines are doubling their capabilities every three to six months, according to Stanford University’s Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence and researchers led by Jaime Sevilla at the U.K.’s University of Aberdeen. Consider ChatGPT Plus, which launched in February, an upgrade on ChatGPT at $20 per month. Original ChatGPT scored in the bottom 10% of test takers on the Uniform Bar Exam, while ChatGPT Plus scores in the top 10%. ChatGPT is limited when it comes to performing advanced math, but ChatGPT Plus includes a tool called Code Interpreter, which analyzes data, creates charts, and performs complex math on the user’s own data.

Even those impressive capabilities leave a long way still to go, however. Korinek believes a world-class A.I. CEO would require long-predicted artificial general intelligence (AGI), which OpenAI CEO Sam Altman defines as “A.I. systems that are generally smarter than humans.” And that level of technology may not be just around the corner. When Geoffrey Hinton, one of the “godfathers of A.I.,” was asked recently when AGI would arrive, he tweeted, “I now predict 5 to 20 years but without much confidence,” and he later told the Guardian newspaper that he “wouldn’t rule out 100 years.”

Yet even AGI won’t be enough to displace a human C-suite executive, because a digital replacement would have to do more than master tasks. Specifically…

It would have to satisfy regulators

All businesses are regulated, and some—financial services, health care, transportation, manufacturing—are heavily regulated. How much trust will regulators invest in A.I.? For example, imagine that a bank wants A.I. to take over a function previously handled by the CFO: “That is going to be heavily scrutinized by the regulators,” says David Wilkins, a Harvard Law School professor whose work on the role of the general counsel has familiarized him with many regulated industries, “particularly after the information about ChatGPT and its tendency to hallucinate.”

Another example: In any publicly traded company’s SEC annual report, the CFO and CEO must sign statements certifying that “this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact,” among many other promises. Would regulators allow A.I. to sign that certification? That puts the government in charge of allowing A.I. to displace CFOs and CEOs.

But even without the regulatory wrinkle, A.I is unlikely to replace a human executive because…

It would have to satisfy society: customers, employees, shareholders, communities

Korinek foresees a future in which humans may be hired for some jobs “merely for the fact of being human,” even if A.I. could do the jobs more effectively and at lower cost. He calls them “nostalgic jobs.” C-suite positions may be prime candidates.

A.I.’s galloping advance “forces us to ask what are the human qualities that we value among our top leaders,” says Wilkins, whose areas of study include leadership and ethics. “It’s not just reaching the correct decision. It’s also about persuading people to feel good about that decision, to be motivated to follow that decision.”

Even if A.I. makes better decisions than humans do, Wilkins believes, that won’t be enough. Will A.I. “make us feel that we have been heard, been valued, been judged by something we can understand, meaning another human being?” he asks. He acknowledges that we have already accepted speaking to bots on the phone, resolving disputes on eBay and Amazon without ever engaging a person, and forsaking human interaction in other ways. But “we’re a long way from giving up on that altogether,” he says. “If we do give up on that altogether, then it’s not clear to me what being human really means anymore.”

The nature of humanity is deep waters even for the C-suite. To take just one more step, let’s imagine that in the coming decades the conception of humanity changes. Indistinguishable humanoid robots—think of the Synths in the TV series Humans, or the Replicants in the 1982 film Blade Runner—become real, powered by artificial general intelligence. Could they displace the C-suite?

Creating such robots will obviously be a much harder job than developing only the AGI component. But whenever that might happen—maybe then.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ccob+1rEWv5Cv

Replace with AI or send job over sea ! Both result in IBM saving money. Going on for a long time and nothing anyone can do about it. So stop complaining and move on!

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @4qpy+1rEWv5Cv

$100 in 2013 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $133.21 today, an increase of $33.21 over 11 years. The dollar had an average inflation rate of 2.64% per year between 2013 and today, producing a cumulative price increase of 33.21%.

So we will need to reach around $275 to really be at its all-time high. Anybody wanna take that bet? I'm selling my meager holdings very soon.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @2tip+1rEWv5Cv

IBM stock is up due to the AI mania and once that is over and IBM fails to deliver (again) it will plummet (again). True AI stocks will grow even after the mania subsides, but that isn’t IBM.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @2dnr+1rEWv5Cv

This play goes back to Sam Palmisano. He would tell Wall Street when the big RA's are coming and the stock shot up for a couple of weeks

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @2kmm+1rEWv5Cv

I sold all my IBM stock back when Ginni and a bunch of other execs sold theirs way back. I figured they knew something. They did. :)

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @1uvn+1rEWv5Cv

Ah, the irony was captured in this paywalled article. AI can easily replace CEO's, but they made rules their jobs can't be touched.

https://fortune.com/2023/07/24/artificial-intelligence-ai-c-suite-jobs-ceos-safe-cultural-regulation-reasons/

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @1pjz+1rEWv5Cv

AK goal is to boost his bottomline and to take the same stage as the Musk's of the world. He is an old style India boss who berates a worker for only doing above and beyond, not exceptional.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @1xck+1rEWv5Cv

Customer service will suffer They will find another vendor Next headline will read IBM stock - nearing all time low

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @aqn+1rEWv5Cv

"His own company used AI to reduce the number of employees working on relatively manual HR-related work to about 50 from 700 previously, which allowed them to focus on other things..." Yea, like finding a new job.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @yth+1rEWv5Cv

Come on. Most of the work is going to the remaining employees and cheaper locations. But kudos to IBM getting the media to believe the AI angle.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @eeh+1rEWv5Cv

No surprise. Wall Street will only be happy till companies have no employees at all.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @yld+1rEWv5Cv

Post a reply

: