The Pak Banker

Goldman Sachs to begin fresh round of job cuts

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Goldman Sachs Group Inc will begin its annual job cutting process as early as this week, sources familiar with the matter said, with its equitiestr­ading business bracing for bigger cuts than fixed-income trading.

The bank usually culls out the weakest 5 percent of its employees around now. But the cuts will likely be deeper in some businesses, particular­ly equities trading, where volumes and earnings are weak. The number of shares traded on major U.S. exchanges so far this year is down 7.2 percent.

Fixed- income trading at Goldman, which took big hits last year but has had better volumes this year, will likely see cuts of less than 5 percent, the sources said.

In totality, cuts across the company will be roughly in line with Goldman’s typical 5 percent culling and are not part of a bigger cost-cutting plan, one source said.

“As market activity has picked up in certain areas, we remain focused on prudently managing expenses and allocating resources to ensure we are best able to meet our clients’ needs and generate good returns for our shareholde­rs,” said Goldman spokesman David Wells, who declined to comment on layoffs.

The cuts underscore how even as Wall Street shows some signs of recovering, banks are looking to thin their ranks to boost profitabil­ity.

Morgan Stanley, Bank of America Corp, Citigroup Inc, and UBS AG, have been cutting staff for the past few years, after revenue has been under pressure in multiple businesses. Regulation­s, meanwhile, are increasing banks’ costs. Over the past two years, Goldman has cut its workforce by 9 percent, or 3,300 employees.

Earlier this month, Goldman’s new chief financial officer, Harvey Schwartz, said that laying off more workers may be the way for banks to generate higher returns on equity for shareholde­rs. The measure is important because it shows how much profit banks can squeeze from their balance sheets.

Last year, Goldman’s return-on- equity was 10.7 percent, an improvemen­t from 2011, but still well below pre-financial crisis highs above 30 percent. Schwartz said he does not see Goldman’s returns last year as “aspiration­al for the long term.”

“I think the industry will migrate to higher returns because they will have to,” Schwartz said, adding that it might be “a question of excess capacity coming out of the industry over a period of time.”

In recent years, Goldman has experience­d a wave of departures of partners and managing directors, who are typically the company’s biggest earners. Some of those departures have been ordinary attrition, while other executives left to make way for up-and-comers.

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