Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Charles Schwab slashing jobs, offices to streamline operations

Breck Dumas
Mon, August 21, 2023

Charles Schwab says it is preparing to reduce both its headcount and real estate footprint in a series of cost-cutting measures aimed at streamlining operations.

The brokerage giant reported in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing the moves were "directly related to the integration of TD Ameritrade," which Schwab acquired in 2020.


Charles Schwab logo displayed at a location in the financial district in New York, Mar. 20, 2023. The company announced in an SEC filing Monday it plans to slash jobs and its real estate footprint as part of a plan to streamline operations.

Schwab said the company is looking to close or downsize some of its corporate offices, and "plans to reduce its operating costs primarily through lower headcount and professional services."


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"We have said, we intend to take a series of actions this year and into 2024 aimed at removing cost and complexity from the firm, including reducing our expense base and streamlining our operating model," the company told FOX Business in a statement.


TD Ameritrade logo seen in San Francisco. Charles Schwab acquired the discount brokerage in 2020 for $26 billion.

Schwab did not say how many jobs might be impacted by the move, but added, "This will result in eliminating some positions in the coming months, mostly in non-client facing areas. We don’t yet have specifics to offer on how many positions will be eliminated."

According to the filing, the company expects to save at least $500 million a year through these cuts, but expects to pay as much as that in employee compensation benefits and facility exit costs when they occur.

The layoffs will likely happen before the end of the year, the filing said, while the real estate exit costs will likely carry into 2024.

Citigroup mulls plan to remove leadership layer at its largest unit - source

By Tatiana Bautzer and Saeed Azhar

Updated Mon, August 21, 2023

NEW YORK (Reuters) -Citigroup is considering plans to eliminate the role atop the bank's biggest division when its leader, Paco Ybarra, leaves next year and have its three segment chiefs report directly to Citi's CEO, according to a source familiar with the situation.

Ybarra, who has been at Citi for 36 years, is head of its Institutional Clients Group (ICG), and that position would no longer exist under the reorganization, the source said on Monday. Instead, the leaders of investment banking, global markets and transaction services would report to CEO Jane Fraser.

The plans, reported earlier by the Financial Times, are under consideration and not finalized, the source said. Citigroup declined to comment.

Citi has been working to simplify its structure. Analysts debated if such a move would add risk to Citi's revamp, or conversely provide Fraser with more control over the bank's direction.

Fraser, who inherited a litany of problems when she took over in 2021, including demands from U.S. regulators to overhaul its risk management systems, has been trying to boost Citi's share price, in part by shedding overseas retail businesses.

"It does make you wonder (whether) having that extra layer of management was indeed unnecessary, or it may raise the odds of execution risk if having that extra set of eyes on the whole unit was indeed valuable," said Eric Compton, banking analyst at Morningstar.

"It goes to show that Citi is still figuring out pieces of this as they go along."

The ICG unit provides financial services to institutional investors and governments. It generated more than half of Citi's $19.4 billion revenue in the second quarter.

The division's leaders include Shahmir Khaliq, who runs treasury and trade solutions, Andy Morton, who leads markets, and Tyler Dickson and Manuel Falco, who jointly lead corporate and investment banking.

"The possibility of a reorg introduces some uncertainty into what is already a complex turnaround," R. Scott Siefers, an analyst at Piper Sandler, wrote in a note.

The change in reporting lines directly to the CEO "would preserve strategic continuity, streamline layers, and presumably eliminate the possibility of a new head who might want to pivot the unit’s direction," he wrote.

Ybarra is set to depart in the first half of 2024, according to an internal memo seen by Reuters earlier this month. The company also said at the time it was determining how to pass on his responsibilities while simplifying its organizational structure in the coming months.

Its shares fell 0.4% while the broader S&P bank index was largely steady in Monday afternoon trading.

Citi trades at 0.41 times 12-month forward price-to-book ratio, below an industry median of 1.77, according to Refinitiv Eikon data.

(Reporting by Tatiana Bautzer and Saeed Azhar in New York, Lavanya Ahire in Bengaluru; Editing by Dhanya Ann Thoppil, Lananh Nguyen, Megan Davies, Hugh Lawson, Mark Potter and Cynthia Osterman)


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