HSBC
Plans to Cut Up to
10,000 Jobs in Drive to
Reduce Costs – Reports
6
October, 2019
HSBC
Holdings is reportedly planning to cut up to 10,000 jobs, mainly
high-paid roles, as interim Chief Executive Officer Noel Quinn aims
to reduce costs across the banking group.
The
plan represents the lender’s most ambitious attempt in years to
slash costs, the Financial Times reported on Sunday, citing two
people briefed on the matter. HSBC could announce job cuts when it
reports third-quarter results later this month, one person briefed on
the matter told the newspaper. HSBC declined to comment.
Quinn
became interim CEO in August after the bank announced the surprise
departure of John Flint, who disagreed with chairman Mark Tucker over
topics including approaches to cutting expenses, a person familiar
with the matter told Reuters in August. Since then, Quinn has been
saying the bank needed a change at the top to address “a
challenging global environment.”
The
reported job cuts come after the lender said it would be laying off
about 4,000 people this year, and issued a gloomier business outlook
due to several international instabilities, including escalation of a
trade war between China and the United States, an easing monetary
policy cycle, unrest in its key Hong Kong market and Brexit.
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