Cincinnati Reds president Walt Jocketty will have to work through some restrictions if the organization hopes to trade Jay Bruce as part of its rebuilding process.

The New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox, Oakland Athletics, Tampa Bay Rays, Miami Marlins, Minnesota Twins, Cleveland Indians, and Arizona Diamondbacks are on Bruce's no-trade protection list, according to Mark Sheldon of MLB.com. The Toronto Blue Jays were previously on the list, but were taken off in order to include the Indians.

The Reds have already parted ways with closer Aroldis Chapman and thid baseman Todd Frazier over the past month, while second baseman Brandon Phillips appeared to be on his way to the Washington Nationals before reportedly rejecting the deal.

Bruce has spent his entire eight-year career with the Reds and is owed $25.5 million over the next two seasons. The 28-year-old outfielder was an All-Star in 2011 and 2012. However, he's struggled at the plate the past two seasons, hitting .222/.288/.406 and 294 strikeouts, but has managed 44 home runs and 56 doubles.

With plenty of free-agent outfielders still available, the market for Bruce might take longer to develop as teams wait to see if they can add to their core without having to trade away assets.