UBS
banking job cuts set to hit London hard
In
one of the biggest banking job culls since Lehman Brothers, London
and New York to be hit hard by 10,000 layoffs worldwide
30
October, 2012
Swiss
banking giant UBS is cutting up to 10,000 jobs worldwide as it scales
back its investment banking operations.
In
one of the biggest banking job culls since Lehman Brothers, the axe
will fall heavily in London and New York, where UBS's investment
banking operations are based. In London, about two-thirds of its
6,500 staff work in investment banking. The rest work in wealth and
asset management, which are not affected by the latest cuts.
The
Zurich-based bank plans to reduce its global headcount from 64,000 to
54,000 in the next three years and said some 2,500 jobs will go in
Switzerland. It declined to give further detail. It is winding
downits fixed-income activities if they are no longer profitable as a
result of new capital rules on riskier busineses introduced since the
financial crisis. Some 2,000 front-office staff will lose their jobs,
with knock-on effects on supporting roles.
A
spokesman denied reports on Twitter that some staff cannot get into
the London offices beside Liverpool Street station because their
passes have stopped working. He said: "When people arrive they
go up in a room and get told by someone from HR."
According
to Bloomberg News, around 100 traders in fixed income in London are
being put on special leave. They are being sent home on full pay as
the consultation process for their departure begins.
The
restructuring is expected to deliver savings of £3.5bn by 2015.
Chief
executive Sergio Ermotti said: "This decision has been a
difficult one, particularly in a business such as ours that is all
about its people. Some reductions will result from natural attrition
and we will take whatever measures we can to mitigate the overall
effect. Throughout the process we will ensure that our people will be
supported and treated with care."
The
news came as UBS posted a loss of £1.4bn for three months to
September, compared with a profit of £670m a year ago. The bank took
a one-off charge of £2bn linked to the restructuring of its
investment banking division and a debt-related charge of £574m.
It
wants to focus on its private bank and leave other business lines,
mainly in fixed income. The Swiss bank said these divisions had been
"rendered uneconomical by changes in regulation and market
developments".
The
remaining investment bank operations - equities, foreign exchange
trading, corporate advice, and precious metals trading - will be run
by Andrea Orcel, a recent Ermotti hire from Bank of America.
"The
net impact of all these changes will be transformational for the
firm," chairman Axel Weber and Ermotti told shareholders in a
letter. "Our overall earnings should be less volatile, more
consistent and of higher quality."
Profits
slid 40% to £1.5bn in the first six months of the year. UBS said in
July that the botched stock market listing of Facebook cost it £227m.
It blamed the loss on Nasdaq's "gross mishandling" of the
flotation, which involved a series of technical errors that caused a
delay in the start of trading of Facebook shares in May.
Former
UBS investment banker Kweku Adoboli, who is accused of almost sinking
the bank with illicit dealing, denied on Monday that he had been a
rogue trader when he lost the bank £1.4bn. He said other members of
his team knew about his "off book" activities. The
32-year-old is currently on trial at Southwark crown court in London,
accused of gambling away the money while working for UBS during the
global financial crisis.
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