Maplewood-based 3M is cutting 2,500 manufacturing jobs worldwide as demand for its products slows.
CEO Mike Roman called it a "necessary decision to align with adjusted production volumes" following a "slower-than-expected" end to the year and bleak outlook for 2023.
The company announced the cuts Tuesday morning but declined to share what locations or divisions the job losses would affect. This wave of layoffs represents about 2.6% of 3M's 95,000-person global workforce.
3M's consumer products have been hit especially hard as people pullback on discretionary spending.
The company expects disposable respirator sales to drop to pre-pandemic levels this year, a revenue decline of roughly $500 million.
Roman said several other factors are converging to push down sales — the company's exit from Russia; the slow rebound from China's COVID-19 lockdown; "aggressive" inventory reductions by retailers; strained hospital budgets and health care labor shortages; and weak demand from industrial customers.
A steep drop in demand for smartphones, TVs and tablets — and a continued shift from LCD to OLED screens — is also putting pressure on 3M sales. The company manufactures films and other critical components for consumer electronics.
Roman told analysts to expect "additional actions" in the coming year to streamline operations, including the health care spinoff.