Peloton, the exercise equipment maker and creator of online fitness classes, has announced that it’s laying off 15 percent of its workforce — 400 people — as CEO, president, and board director Barry McCarthy steps down after two years in the role.
McCarthy, who was previously CFO at Spotify and Netflix, was coerced out of retirement in early 2022 when Peloton co-founder and then-CEO John Foley stepped down as part of a major cost-cutting effort that saw 2,800 employees laid off.
Peloton says that it’s in the process of finding a successor to McCarthy, with current Peloton chairperson Karen Boone and director Chris Bruzzo serving as interim co-CEOs through the transition.
Peloton went public in 2019, going from an opening day valuation of around $6 billion to a $50 billion company by early 2021. The company was one of the major beneficiaries of the global pandemic, as the world hunkered down at home seeking ways to stay healthy through expensive home exercise equipment. As the world returned to normality, so did Peloton’s shares which plummeted to $10 billion in January, 2022, a year after its peak.
Today, the company’s market cap sits at a little more than $1 billion, however its shares are up nearly 8% in pre-market trading as news of Peloton’s cost-cutting measures emerge.
This is a developing story, refresh for updates.