| Click for the Finfacts Ireland Portal Homepage |

Finfacts Business News Centre

   
Home 
 
 News
 Irish
 European
 International
 
 Analysis/Comment

RSS FEED


How to use our RSS feed

 
Web Finfacts

See Search Box lower down this column for searches of Finfacts news pages. Where there may be the odd special character missing from an older page, it's a problem that developed when Interactive Tools upgraded to a new content management system.

Welcome

Finfacts is Ireland's leading business information site and you are in its business news section.

We provide access to live business television and business related videos from: Bloomberg TV; The Wall Street Journal; CNBC and the Financial Times. Click image:

Links

Finfacts Homepage

Irish Share Prices

Euribor Daily Rates

Irish Economy

Global Income Per Capita

Global Cost of Living

Irish Tax 2008

Climate Change Reports

Global News

Bloomberg News

CNN Money

Cnet Tech News

Newspapers

Irish Independent

Irish Times

Irish Examiner

New York Times

Financial Times

Technology News

 

Feedback

 

Content Management by interactivetools.com.

News : International Last Updated: Apr 24, 2009 - 5:31:05 PM


Staffs at financial centres brace for job cuts
By Finfacts Team
Mar 19, 2008 - 4:04:49 AM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

More than 20,000 work at Dublin's International Financial Services Centre (IFSC)

Following the announcement on Tuesday by the nationalised UK bank Northern Rock, that it is to shed 2,000 jobs - - a third of the workforce - - and the implosion of US investment bank Bear Stearns, which has a payroll of 14,000 globally, including 1,400 in London and 150 in Dublin, Paris and Frankfurt, staffs at financial centres are bracing for a raft of job cuts.

Citigroup is expected to soon announce a new series of job cuts that may amount to up to 10% of of it global head count of 370,000. Merrill Lynch, another big loser from the subprime debacle, is also due to make big job cuts.

Swiss banking giant UBS, is reported to be considering cutting up to 10% of its workforce, or 8,000 jobs. The bank has already announced plans to axe 1,500 jobs, and a further cost reduction plan could leave nearly 10,000 UBS staff out of work.

Experian, the research agency, says that investment banking cuts will account for the bulk of up to 200,000 jobs disappearing across the entire financial services sector this year. 

About 65,000 have been lost since the credit crunch started in August, it said.

The sector employs about 12m in the US and Europe and survived the downturn in 2001 to 2002 with no net job losses.

The Financial Times says that job losses accounting for about 15% of the US and European investment banking industry have become a near certainty in the first half of this year following the latest turmoil on Wall Street, senior bankers have warned.

The US is expected to see the greatest reduction in headcount, at about 15%, reflecting the rapid slowdown in the economy and looser employment contracts.

Cuts totalling about 10% are expected in the City of London and other European financial centres.

A forecast published on Monday says that 10,000 UK jobs will be lost in the City this year, as banks retrench.

The forecast is an upward revision from the Centre for Economic Business Research, which suggested just three months ago that job losses in the City would reach only 6,500 this year.

Doug McWilliams, chief executive of the CEBR, warned that the total could yet rise again. The economic research group publishes data on the City twice a year, and is due to report again early next month. "Obviously the world moves on. Previously we thought it would be a slightly more limited number of jobs that would be lost but confidence is rather weaker than we assumed. On what we can see now, the number of job losses will be higher. It is all to do with confidence, and confidence is one of these things which is tremendously fragile and volatile. The number could yet change."

Several thousand jobs have already been cut at banks including Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and Merrill Lynch.

Boston Consulting expects it will take two to three quarters before the industry gets more clarity. "If the market conditions haven't improved materially, then there is a potential for a more aggressive pull back among the firms," it said.

Related Articles


© Copyright 2007 by Finfacts.com

Top of Page

International
Latest Headlines
Markets News Friday: Media report in China says Google may announce pullout next week; Seán FitzPatrick kept in Garda custody overnight
Obama signs jobs support bill; US labour market will recover at a “lackluster” pace
South China's industrial heartland of Guangdong to raise minimum wage by average of 21% to range of $96 to $150 a month
Worldwide fish production at 160 million tons - - eight times as much as in 1950
Friday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - March 19, 2010
The “Great Risk Shift” - - why it may be time to re-think the developed/ emerging-markets distinction
Markets News Afternoon: Irish Services Producer Prices down 4.1% in 2009; EU trade deficit up; Initial weekly jobless benefit claims fall 5,000 in US
US Leading Economic Index increased 0.1% in February indicating slow economic recovery
US current-account deficit fell to $419.9 billion in 2009 - - the smallest deficit since 2001 and down from $706.1 billion in 2008
Markets News Thursday: Former Anglo Irish Bank chief Seán FitzPatrick under arrest; China carrying out yuan stress tests on 12 industries
Thursday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - March 18, 2010
World Bank says China’s growth momentum has continued in the first months of 2010
Fund managers shifting their equity focus away from Europe to US and Japan; European equity markets seen as “cheap” by one-third of polled managers
US housing starts and permits fell in February because of severe weather
Markets News Tuesday: Shares rise in Europe and Asia; Investors in Japan expect central bank to extend lending support
Lehman ousted whistleblower in 2008 who had raised red flags with Big 4 accounting firm Ernst & Young on $50bn scam; Box-ticking auditors in frame
Tuesday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - March 16, 2010
Real price of Amsterdam house only doubled in more than 350 years
Markets News Afternoon: US industrial production was flat in February; China held $889bn in Treasury securities in January - - Ireland held $$39bn
Moody's says US and the UK are moving closer to losing their AAA credit ratings as the cost of servicing their debt rises