Toronto Star

More bank job cuts coming, analyst says

Canada’s Big Six look to cut costs to offset lower revenue growth in modern tech environmen­t

- SUNNY FREEMAN BUSINESS REPORTER

Scotiabank office support workers are the latest casualties in a round of industry-wide job cuts as banks seek to boost profit amid threats from new players and economic stagnation.

The bank said Friday that over the next two years it will cut jobs and consolidat­e regional centres into two technology hubs in Toronto. The bank did not say how many employees would lose their jobs.

Canada’s Big Six banks are aggressive­ly trimming expenses to offset slow revenue growth in their core businesses to deliver profit growth to shareholde­rs.

Banks have long cut their workforces — their biggest expense — during periods of economic instabilit­y. But this downturn also coincides with a new challenge: a wave of technologi­cal transforma­tion.

The affected Scotiabank employees were largely doing paper-based processing, now completed directly by customers online or by automated systems.

“These operations were initially built to serve the branch network when much of the work was done on paper and where the majority of customer banking took place,” said Scotia spokeswoma­n Sheena Findlay. “Since then, customers and the bank have both moved increasing­ly to digital banking and digital operations.”

All of the big banks are taking similar cost-cutting measures, said John Aiken, a banking analyst at Barclays Capital.

A report from Reuters Monday said TD Bank is cutting several hundred jobs as part of an organizati­onal review. National Bank announced earlier this month that it is cutting hundreds of jobs.

Aiken expects other banks will follow suit.

CIBC and BMO have also announced restructur­ing, Aiken said, which is an indicator that job cuts are coming.

As new technology makes banking operations more efficient, jobs involving paperwork are the first to go, Aiken said.

Rapidly evolving financial technology is a double-edged sword for banks.

It is streamlini­ng bank operations, but tech companies — from giants such as Google and Apple to start-up mobile account and loan companies — are threatenin­g their traditiona­l sources of profit.

Many banks are investing heavily in financial technology to compete against emerging fintech players even as they reduce spending in other areas.

The imperative has overwhelme­d the immediate benefits that costcuttin­g would otherwise have on

“(Technology) is where the threat of disruption is coming from and the banks need to try to stay ahead of that.” JOHN AIKEN ANALYST, BARCLAYS CAPITAL

banks’ bottom lines, a National Bank analyst report concluded earlier this week.

Both Big Six banks that acknowledg­ed job cuts this week have recently announced the opening of new high-tech incubators that will create hundreds of jobs.

“There’s going to be ongoing invest- ment in technology,” Aiken said.

“That is where the threat of disruption is coming from, and the banks need to try to stay ahead of that.”

 ?? FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Scotiabank is the latest to undergo a round of job cuts as banks try to maintain profits amid diminishin­g growth.
FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Scotiabank is the latest to undergo a round of job cuts as banks try to maintain profits amid diminishin­g growth.

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