Banks eye layoffs as short-term crisis ends, long-term
costs emerge
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[August 29, 2020] By
Elizabeth Dilts Marshall, Anirban Sen and Imani Moise
NEW YORK (Reuters) - At the height of the
coronavirus pandemic last spring, the heads of U.S. banks including
Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Corp and others pledged not to cut any
jobs in 2020 because it was the wrong thing to do.
However, as executives prepare for an extended recession and loan losses
that come with it, layoffs are back on the table, said consultants,
industry insiders and compensation analysts.
Compared with April projections, bank economists and executives expect
the U.S. economy to take longer to recover, with high unemployment into
2021 and interest rates staying near zero for the foreseeable future.
On top of that, working from home has shown some managers that they need
fewer employees to do the same amount of work.
"No question, layoffs (will) come across the board for all the banks,"
said Barry Schwartz, chief investment officer at Toronto-based Baskin
Wealth Management, which invests in JPMorgan Chase and other large
Canadian banks.
Banks have to cut costs because of expected credit issues, as well as
low interest rates and regulatory pressure to trim dividends, he said.
Bank staff could shrink by an average of 5-10%, mainly at mid- and lower
levels in technology, human resources and finance departments, according
to Alan Johnson, head of the compensation consultancy Johnson
Associates, Inc.
JPMorgan Chase & Co already cut around 100 jobs in mid-July, according
to comments on social media. People who said they worked in three
divisions – the community and consumer bank, the commercial bank and the
corporate and investment bank – said they were let go. JPMorgan
representatives declined to comment.
Wells Fargo & Co resumed cutting jobs in August after putting layoffs on
hold in March. The affected staff have so far been in technology and
retail banking, and management is planning thousands more layoffs this
year and next, sources said.
"We didn't see a lot of restructuring or layoffs with the banks (earlier
in the pandemic). We're starting to see it now," said Dennis Baden,
partner-in-charge at executive search firm Heidrick & Struggles.
"Things will get a little bit worse ... and we might see an increase in
restructuring."
Among global banks, Standard Chartered PLC and HSBC Holdings PLC have
let go of several hundred employees this year. Standard Chartered plans
to lay off a few hundred more this year and early next year, according
to bank sources.
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A homeless man sleeps in a closed Chase bank branch on a nearly
deserted Wall Street in the financial district in lower Manhattan
during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in New
York City, New York, U.S., April 3, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File
Photo
A Standard Chartered spokesman said the job cuts are not due to the pandemic,
but are part of a more than 4-year-old strategic plan. Any Standard Chartered
employees let go in 2020 will be paid their salary for the rest of the year and
will receive severance pay, according to a bank statement.
HSBC announced this month it was restarting a plan to cut 35,000 jobs.
The Bank of Nova Scotia also let go of some U.S. investment bank staff,
according to several sources familiar with the development. The bank declined to
comment.
Reuters reported in May that large Wall Street banks were widely expected to cut
budgets, including areas in technology and operations, like third-party
consultants, business analytics, process management and call centers.
FROM RECORD REVENUES TO JOB CUTS
Wall Street's trading and investment banking businesses generated huge revenue
from the market volatility in March and April. But CEOs and analysts have since
cautioned that capital-markets revenue will trend downwards for the rest of the
year, despite market indexes posting record highs recently.
Analysts still expect banks to report decent profits in coming quarters, and
some may continue to invest in core businesses in an opportunistic way. For
instance, JPMorgan Chase opened 13 new branches in July, after having closed 22
branches in June on a net basis, according to S&P Global.
Still, banks are planning staff cuts because costs are expected to be high
relative to revenue, and management teams have found that remote work setups
function better than expected, said Johnson.
"Everyone has been surprised by how much more efficient you can be," he said.
"Later this year or early next year, (managers will) look around and say we just
have many more people than we need."
(This story corrects paragraph 9 to say that Wells Fargo "resumed cutting jobs
in August" after a pause in March, instead of "outlining a three-month pause in
April".)
(Reporting by Elizabeth Dilts Marshall, Anirban Sen, Imani Moise; Editing by
Lauren LaCapra and Richard Chang)
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