UBS
To Terminate 10,000, Or One Sixth Of Its Employees
24
October, 2012
There is
down-sizing; there is trimming-the-fat; and then there is UBS. The
once-giant Swiss Bank just announced it will cut up to 10,000 jobs.
This comes on top of the 3,500 from last year - which makes a rather
dramatic weight-loss strategy for the 63,500 employee firm. As the FT
reports, they will not happen all at once (so just after the
election then?) but will lead to the closure of a sizable part of
UBS' fixed-income trading operations (and other capital intensive
areas of the investment bank).
Perhaps in
the understatement of the day: "There were several options on
the table but UBS has decided on the most radical one," a
person familiar commented as the plan is hoped to reduce complexity
and costs - so no more Bloomberg Terminals?
One thing
surely gone is a source of fixed income axes: "The new
strategy, hammered out in several executive board meetings in New
York this week and set to be announced next Tuesday, will lead to the
closure of a sizeable part of UBS’s fixed-income trading operations
and other capital-intensive areas of the investment bank."
The winner:
Goldman of course, which in a world of collapsing trading revenues
has taken to Lehmaning its competition once again, only this time not
using brute force but the far more classical war of attrition in a
collapsing economy.
Via FT:
UBS is set
to unveil a radical downsizing of its struggling investment bank next
week in a move that will prompt the loss of up to 10,000 jobs across
the Swiss banking group.
Switzerland’s
largest bank by assets will significantly shrink the trading side and
complexity of its investment bank and as a consequence also cut
thousands of jobs in its back office over the next few years, three
people close to the situation said.
The job
cuts will amount to almost a sixth of the bank’s workforce of
63,500 at the end of June. They will not happen all at once and the
precise number is still unclear as the exact impact on back-office
functions has not yet been determined.
It comes on
top of another – still ongoing – programme announced last year to
cut 3,500 jobs.
The move
highlights how banks around the world are trying to adapt to a
radically changed regulatory and market environment that has left
them with lower returns and much higher capital needs for certain
business areas and national subsidiaries.
The new
strategy, hammered out in several executive board meetings in New
York this week and set to be announced next Tuesday, will lead to the
closure of a sizeable part of UBS’s fixed-income trading operations
and other capital-intensive areas of the investment bank.
“There
were several options on the table but UBS has decided on the most
radical one,” one person familiar with the plan said.
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