Crypto Winter Is Not Bothering Most Employees Report

Last updated: June 9, 2025, 01:08

Crypto Winter Is Not Bothering Most Employees Report

Kraken

Kraken, the world’s third-largest exchange by trading volume, announced cutting off its workforce by 30% to deal with current market conditions. Specifically, the San-Francisco based company

Coinbase cut 18% of its staff in June, Gemini reduced it by 10% in July and Crypto.com reduced the staff by 5%. Even with such percentages, there’s been no decline in

The crypto winter gets colder: more job losses, warnings of Bitcoin

The so

The so-called crypto winter has seen digital asset prices fall (including those of NFTs), lawsuits, bankruptcies, and job losses.

Crypto winter prods firms to freeze hiring, but all

Kraken announced on Wednesday that the crypto exchange is laying off 30% of its workforce, about 1,100 employees, as a cost-cutting measure amid Crypto Winter.

Crypto Winter: Who Was Prepared, Who’s Going Broke, What Are

The latest victims of Crypto Winter? Nearly one-third of Kraken

Crypto Winter is not bothering Most Employees: Report

In particular

Despite Crypto Winter, Metaverse and NFT Job Market Is Still

Crypto Winter Casualties Continue: Kraken To Lay Off Over 1,000

In particular, crypto news and research platform, The Block published a report on Dec. 21, revealing that crypto-related employment has risen by 351% since 2025. It

As prices plunge

Crypto employment reaches record high despite crypto winter

Some are going broke, some are experiencing pay cuts and layoffs, and some were prepared and are unaffected. To gauge the overall effects this crypto winter has had

As prices plunge, companies collapse and skepticism soars, fortunes and jobs are disappearing overnight, and investors’ feverish speculation has been replaced by icy

Many significant crypto firms have

Many significant crypto firms have been letting go of employees to cut costs. 1,100 people were laid off from Coinbase. 260 employees were let go from Crypto.com. 100

Crypto investors’ hot streak ends as harsh ‘winter’ descends