Business World

Goldman Sachs seen cutting fixed income trading jobs by 10%

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GOLDMAN SACHS is cutting between five and 10% of staff in its fixed income and currency trading business, a source familiar with the matter said on Friday.

This is part of the annual process around this time of year when a swathe of people, typically around five percent of Goldman’s overall work force, is let go. Goldman employed 36,800 people at the end of 2015.

But its FIC division is likely to feel the squeeze more than most because of the challenges posed by low interest rates and stricter regulation­s that have curbed profits in areas like fixed income trading.

A spokesman for Goldman in New York declined to comment. The company does not give a breakdown of its employee numbers in the FIC division.

Revenue from FIC trading was $1.12 billion in the fourth quarter of last year, the lowest since the fourth quarter of 2008, during the depths of the financial crisis.

FIC comprised 15% of overall revenue, a far cry from the days when it regularly contribute­d about 40%.

Goldman Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein last month said the bank remained committed to fixed income trading but signaled that market turmoil, declining oil prices and concerns about profitabil­ity across the banking sector meant costs would be cut again.

“We can absolutely do a lot more on the cost side if we have to, especially now, when you have to deliver a return,” Mr. Blankfein told a financial services forum in Miami on Feb. 9. “We take a particular and energetic look at continued cost cuts when revenues are stalled ...Necessity is the mother of invention.”

Mr. Blankfein said last month that the bank had already taken measures to cut headcount, which it has reduced 10% in its fixed income business since 2012.

Goldman’s shares are down 14% so far this year, underperfo­rming the broader S&P financials index which is down 7%.

 ??  ?? PEOPLE walk and cycle past Goldman Sachs headquarte­rs in New York City.
PEOPLE walk and cycle past Goldman Sachs headquarte­rs in New York City.

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