Also Read: Spotify to Lay Off 17% of Staff, Its Third Round of Job Cuts This Year Shortly after the layoffs were announced earlier this week, Spotify’s stock jumped about 8 per cent. On Tuesday, Vogel moved to sell more than $9.3 million worth of shares, according to securities filings.
Two other senior executives also cashed in over $1.6 million in shares, according to a report by the Guardian. Vogel will leave Spotify on March 31.
Ben Kung, who currently serves as vice president of financial planning and analysis, “will take on expanded responsibilities" in the interim as Spotify searches for a successor externally, the company said in a blog post. Stockholm-based Spotify posted a net loss of 462 million euros (about $500 million) for the nine months to September.
The company announced in January that it was axing 6 per cent of total staff. In June, it cut staff by another 2 per cent, or about 200 workers, mainly in its podcast division.
Spotify posted a surprise profit in the third quarter and stronger-than-expected subscriber and user growth. The company raised the price of its subscription in the US and other major markets over the summer, a long-awaited increase the company said has not led to higher churn, according to a report by Wall Street Journal.Milestone Alert!
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