Job cuts announced by
European banks tumble in 2016
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[December 15, 2016]
By Ritvik Carvalho and Anjuli Davies
LONDON
(Reuters) - Job cuts announced by European banks have tumbled in 2016,
as they work through a backlog of layoffs unveiled in previous years and
struggle to find new areas where they can trim staff without threatening
profitable operations.
Some industry watchers say lenders might even recruit a little next year
overall, provided the market rally following Donald Trump's U.S.
presidential election victory continues, although banks themselves are
looking to joint ventures with rivals to cut costs further - signaling
more layoffs.
On Tuesday, UniCredit <CRDI.MI> said it plans to cut 14,000 jobs by
2019, bringing the total number of layoffs announced by 17 major banks
in Europe this year to just under 50,000, according to analysis by
Reuters.
But in the second half of 2015 alone, the number of announced job losses
was 130,000, with culls at HSBC, Standard Chartered , Deutsche Bank <DBKGn.DE>
and Credit Suisse among others.
Widely seen to be lagging their American counterparts in an era of low
interest rates and tight regulation, European banks have implemented
major restructurings since 2011 in an attempt to boost profits and stay
competitive.
This year the cuts at UniCredit, along with layoffs at Commerzbank , ING
Groep and more at Credit Suisse, accounted for over 25,000 of the
announced job losses.
However, other banks held back despite their repeated emphasis that low
profit margins caused by low or negative interest rates and new
regulations imposed on the industry since the global financial crisis
mean they need to slash costs.
That's because many are still implementing previously announced
reductions, as well as finding they are running out of areas where they
can easily lay off staff, having slashed their numbers in retail and
investment banking.
"Banks seem to be reasonably content and comfortable with their size
right now," said Richard Hoar, a director at recruitment firm Goodman
Mason. "They've trimmed down a lot and might actually need to go up a
bit next year if the market bounce continues."
One of the problems for banks has been that while they have cut back
heavily in some areas, the new rules and ageing IT systems have forced
them to bulk up their headcount in areas such as regulatory compliance
and technology.
The result is that while major banks have made hundreds of thousands of
job cuts since the 2008 crisis, the overall number of people working in
Europe's financial industry has stayed relatively steady. Total
headcount at banks on the STOXX Europe 600 Banks Index <.SX7P> was
2,362,677 at the end of 2015, just 5.2 percent below the 2,491,125
employees in 2007, according to data compiled by Reuters.
"Staff numbers haven't come down much because there's been a dramatic
shift in who the banks employ. There has been ramp-up in IT and tech
staff as they automate, and a reduction in administrative functions,"
said Xavier Van Hove, fund manager at GAM.
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Storm clouds are seen above the Canary Wharf financial district in
London, Britain, August 3, 2010. REUTERS/Greg Bos/File Photo
NEW WAYS OF CUTTING COSTS
With the major restructurings of the past five years failing to revive
profitability, the European banks are now being forced to think of more
innovative ways to cut costs.
In
August, UBS chief executive Sergio Emmotti said the industry would have to share
economies of scale by forming joint ventures in certain business areas. Credit
Suisse has since said it is in talks with another bank about a cost-sharing
project, without elaborating on what that involves.
Octavio Marenzi, CEO of consultancy firm Opimas, said he expects banks will
announce plans to start sharing back-office administrative operations in certain
areas, where they have little competitive advantage to going it alone.
"We'll see more of those kinds of plays where banks try and get the same
economies of scale without full blown mergers ... merging portions of their
business, undifferentiated aspects of their business, cost centers ... and try
and reduce things that way," he said, suggesting fixed income operations as one
area likely to see this happen.
However, some investors think banks will need to go further, saying the cuts to
areas such as trading and investment banking have left some lenders too small to
go it alone.
"The
problem for European investment banks is the lack of scale, not the quality of
the banks," said Eric Knight, founder of activist investor Knight-Vinke, who
once tried to force UBS to spin off its investment bank. "They're unprofitable
because they're too small."
He believes there will eventually be mergers between U.S. or Chinese banks and
European lenders, because they lack scale in wholesale trading and have no deep
domestic market to subsidize their activities.
In August, top executives from Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank held talks on
a potential combination of Germany's two biggest lenders, while Sweden's Nordea
confirmed in October it had approached Dutch state-owned ABN AMRO for a
takeover.
But so far regulatory reluctance and governments wary of losing control over
their national lenders mean few full-blown mergers are likely to come about in
the near future.
"Regulators clearly do not want larger banks," Knight told a banking summit in
November. "But the idea that these banks could carry on just shrinking their way
into a successful strategy is not tenable."
(editing by David Stamp)
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