Bangkok Post

CAIXABANK TO AXE 8,300 JOBS

CaixaBank will shed nearly one fifth of jobs in the latest cuts to hit the banking sector.

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Within a month of completing its takeover of Bankia SA, Spain’s CaixaBank SA said on Tuesday that it would shed nearly one in five jobs in the latest cuts to hit the banking sector.

CaixaBank confirmed the move would affect 8,291 staff following the mega-merger with Bankia to form Spain’s largest domestic lender by assets.

The cutbacks were necessary as a result of the overlaps and synergies derived from the merger and the current market circumstan­ces, it said in a statement.

The move comes as the sector struggles with very low interest rates, the economic crisis caused by the pandemic and a surge in popularity of online banking services.

The planned job losses, which have yet to be negotiated with the unions, “represent 16% of CaixaBank’s total workforce of 51,000,’’ the UGT union said.

“The bank also intends to shut 1,534 branches, accounting for 27% of its locations in Spain,’’ unions said.

Last month, CaixaBank’s CEO Gonzalo Gortazar said he wanted to implement cuts that would not be “traumatic” and that would be voluntary.

The bank’s statement said it would give preference to voluntary departures, while stressing that should not include more than 50% of staff over the age of 50.

Completed at the end of March, the merger has transforme­d the landscape of Spanish banking with the new entity retaining the CaixaBank name and holding 25% of the domestic market.

The deal created Spain’s largest bank with combined assets of €664 billion ($787 billion) and 20 million customers in the domestic market, putting it ahead of Banco Santander SA and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA (BBVA), both of which have a more internatio­nal presence.

The Spanish state was the largest shareholde­r in Bankia, but following the deal, its 62% stake dropped to 16% in the new group.

Government spokeswoma­n Maria Jesus Montero said the losses could have been far higher.

“If the merger had not taken place, it could have been a lot worse,” she said. “Although the numbers are certainly high, they would have been much higher if each bank had conducted its own restructur­ing.”

The government had encouraged the merger in the hope of increasing Bankia’s profitabil­ity in order to recover some of the money it invested to rescue the bank in 2012 with a huge €22-billion aid package.

The huge merger comes in a very difficult context for Spain which saw the economy contract 10.8% in 2020, one of the worst performers in the euro zone.

Banks in Spain lost €6.9 billion in 2020 after forking out €12 billion to cover the increased risk of the non-repayment of loans, according to a report published on Tuesday by AEB, the Spanish Banking Associatio­n.

Since the financial crisis of 2008, Spain’s banks have reportedly shed nearly 100,000 staff.

Late last year, Spanish banking giant Santander said it would slash nearly 3,600 jobs while Banco Sabadell SA plans to cut 1,800 as part of major restructur­ing.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A man walks out of a CaixaBank branch in Madrid on Tuesday.
REUTERS A man walks out of a CaixaBank branch in Madrid on Tuesday.

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