Thread regarding Oracle Corp. layoffs

Question for more experienced folks.

33 yo - 6 years with oracle. infra eng. total comp around $200K. wife is a teacher, about $60k.

how much $$$ do i need to have stashed to survive a potential layoff.

my gut tells me that i am on the list.

appreciate comments


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| 11 views | | 14 replies (last May 7) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kqe061ps

14 replies (most recent on top)

Now people on these posts don’t like the police? Hahahahaahha

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Post ID: @1dj+1kqe061ps

The issue is that property and income taxes are too high that there’s very little left after paying them. Request to eliminate property and state income taxes ;0);0);0);0);0)

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Post ID: @jb+1kqe061ps

save 80%

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Post ID: @ha+1kqe061ps

bare minimum 6 months of expenses to survive with no income.
1 year ideally.
2 years conservative.

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Post ID: @eg+1kqe061ps

For years I track every penny I spend in a spreadsheet so i know EXACTLY where it all goes, what can be removed (eating out, entertainment) and the bare minimum I need each month. This allows me to plan for retirement as well as having my emergency fund.
I make it easy, I put it all on CC and pay it off each month, never paying interest but getting either cash back or points. My last trip, used points for air and hotel

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Post ID: @c3+1kqe061ps

Options like Section 8 housing, food assistance (SNAP), cash aid, and free or low-cost healthcare can provide support when you need it most. After paying taxes ~ 40% for so many years, these programs are there as a safety net. It's worth looking into if you qualify

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Post ID: @b9+1kqe061ps

Police are hiring aggressively right now with Big Fat Paychecks, Big Fat Pensions, Great Benefits,...

For example, take a look at the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office. They have many open positions with base pay starting over $100K. Don't miss out! ;0);0);0);0);0)

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Post ID: @b8+1kqe061ps

Best time to find a job is when you’re in the job. Go outside or pivot your strategy

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Post ID: @b7+1kqe061ps

You should have started saving aggressively in your 20s. Surviving a layoff is one thing. You should have started saving and investing early on.

But the next best time is today.

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Post ID: @ap+1kqe061ps

You didn't mention kids so that's a good thing. Me wife and I have discovered ways to be frugal that would be difficult with kids.

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Post ID: @an+1kqe061ps
BARE MINIMUM = $4000. If California = $6000

Health Insurance - $1500 / month
Car Insurance , Gas, car maintenance - increasing gas prices
Rent or Mortgage
Phone, Internet
Utilities

Food & Groceries

If your wife is full-time then insurance , food can be covered.
If temporary job then this money is useless in long run unless you live in Texas or some remote place.

Housing is your biggest enemy.

Unemployment - depends on state you get from $1200-$4000. keeping $1200 as minimal.

If you are in visa then you need extra payments. Better to store your house in Public Storage and travel back once you have permanent job.

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Post ID: @a4+1kqe061ps

@a2 Relying on $100k to cover a 14-month burn is risky. At 33, if that’s your only liquid buffer, protecting it should be the priority - not drawing it down.

If you had $100k cash plus substantial investments (say $800k+ outside of a well-funded 401(k)), that’s a different conversation. But with a large mortgage and limited liquidity, the margin for error is thin.

Best move, start a job search immediately. Get options lined up now, you may even want to take a new role before any layoff happens, even if that means walking away from severance. It’s generally easier to land a job while you’re still employed, and your current financial setup doesn’t leave much room for a prolonged gap.

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Post ID: @a3+1kqe061ps

you’re thinking about the right things early, which is good. quick math - your fixed costs alone are roughly $4.8k monthly before food, utilities, insurance, etc, so realistically you’re probably closer to $6k to $7k burn per month.

with ~$100k liquid, you’ve got around 14 to 16 months of runway, which is actually solid. most people aim for 6 to 12 months, so you’re above that.

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Post ID: @a2+1kqe061ps

forgot to add, $800 in car payments. $4k mortgage. no kids. no other liabilities/credits. have about $100 in liquid $$$

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Post ID: @a1+1kqe061ps

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