US BANKER Citigroup began a round of layoffs among its London-based investment bankers this week, with jobs in advisory, equities and fixed income set to go as the bank readies 4,500 redundancies worldwide.
There are likely to be “several hundred” job cuts across the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, a person familiar with the matter said, as part of the layoffs outlined by Citi chief executive Vikram Pandit on Tuesday.
The bank has already told some staff they are at risk, and teams are set to hear specific proposals on different days this week. Those in the investment banking division, which includes merger and acquisitions advisory, were told on Monday, two people familiar with the matter said.
The equities division, one of the areas expected to be the worst affected by cuts, and other areas such as foreign exchange were expecting to hear yesterday or today.
“As part of our ongoing efforts to control expenses, we are making targeted headcount reductions in certain businesses and functions across Citi,” a spokesman for the bank said.
A tough six months for bond and stock markets as euro zone concerns spiralled is dragging on banks’ revenues, and firms across Europe, Asia and the US have so far slashed well over 120,000 jobs in big cost-cutting drives.
Citi’s cuts equates to about 2 per cent of its 267,000 workforce. About 2,000 staff are based in Dublin’s IFSC.
Many rivals are cutting up to 10 per cent of staff. Several Citi insiders said they expected further cuts, possibly next year, even though the bank has been rehiring in the past 18 months after a particularly rough financial crisis.
Citi cut thousands of jobs after heavy losses on toxic assets meant it had to be bailed out in 2008, and it had only recently started adding again in Europe. Global headcount grew throughout this year by about 7,000 people from 260,000 at the end of 2010, according to company reports. However, it is still far from Citi’s 325,000 headcount at the end of 2006.
In EMEA, Citi has also revamped the structure of its investment banking division, centering teams around clients rather than the products they market. – (Reuters)