The layoffs occurred last week.
According to the publication, the corporation provides a bonus to its employees who work at the headquarters in the form of payment for food delivery.
They receive $20 a day for breakfast, $25 for lunch and $25 for dinner.
As the Financial Times writes, over time the corporation discovered abuses by employees: for example, instead of going to the office, some ordered food home.
As the newspaper discovered, some former employees of the company admitted that they used the payments to buy everyday goods.
Some employees who abused payments only occasionally received a reprimand, the newspaper notes.
However, the corporation itself declined to comment on these layoffs.