Rogers Communications Inc. has opened a voluntary buyout program that makes roughly 10,000 employees eligible to seek an exit package, the company said through reports citing people familiar with the matter. The eligibility number is about half of Rogers’ reported 20,000-person workforce and excludes staff who work for the Toronto Blue Jays baseball team and the company’s 75%-owned sports business, Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, both of which are not part of the staff-reduction offer.
Market reaction to the announcement was modest. Shares of the Canadian telecommunications firm listed in the United States rose as much as 1.3% during trading hours. In Canada, the stock advanced about 1.1% ahead of the market close.
Observers note that the headline eligibility figure should not be read as the expected number of departures. Historical patterns for similar buyout programs indicate that approximately 10% of eligible employees typically submit applications for exit packages. Applied here, that conversion rate would translate to roughly 1,000 employees seeking buyouts. The company will not necessarily accept every application, and the final number of exits could be lower than even that estimate.
Rogers is pursuing the program amid broader industry pressures, with the telecommunications sector described as facing notable growth and debt challenges. The buyout initiative is framed as a cost-reduction measure rather than a compulsory layoff plan, relying on voluntary participation from eligible staff.
Key details remain limited to the eligibility count and the exclusion of the Blue Jays and Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment employees. The company’s U.S.-traded shares and Canadian-listed stock both showed small gains on the news, reflecting a measured investor response to the announcement.
Summary of the situation
- About 10,000 Rogers employees have been made eligible for voluntary buyouts.
- The eligible pool is roughly half of the company’s 20,000 staff, excluding the Blue Jays and MLSE employees.
- U.S.-listed shares rose up to 1.3%; Canadian shares gained 1.1% ahead of the close.