Banks' Cost-Cutting Plan: 'Wet-Wipe Wednesday'
October 29 2015 - 6:39AM
Dow Jones News
By Margot Patrick, Max Colchester and Jeannette Neumann
LONDON--For European banks on a quest to cut costs, no expense
is too small.
Windows at 2,300 branches of Spain's Banco de Sabadell SA are
being cleaned six times a year instead of 12. Portugal's Banco
Comercial Português SA kills the lights in its executive offices at
7 p.m. to save on electricity bills. Caixabank SA has cut the
number of printers and waste baskets in its Barcelona headquarters
to discourage paper consumption.
Some employees at Lloyds Banking Group PLC recently received a
memo dubbed "Wet Wipe Wednesday," imploring them to wipe down their
own desks each week. German banks have stopped paying for employee
perks such as after-work sports.
The aggressive penny pinching is a fact of life for financial
institutions facing a stultifying mix of anemic economic growth,
low interest rates and higher regulatory costs. "Sometimes there is
the odd bird dropping on the window," says Albert Coll, Sabadell's
director of institutional policy and market relations. "But we take
pride that it relates to cost cutting."
American banks are cutting back as well-- J.P. Morgan Chase
& Co. has notably told some employees to pay for their own
phones. But European banks got a later start on restructuring and
are now in the middle of a broad retreat that has left them lagging
behind their trans-Atlantic rivals. European banks on average made
a 3.95% return on equity in the first half, compared with 8.54% in
the U.S., according to data from FactSet.
More than 100,000 banking jobs have been cut across the European
Union since 2012, according to data from the European Banking
Federation. The U.K. alone has lost 40,000 banking jobs since 2011,
according to a report last week by the British Bankers'
Association.
More cuts are on the way. Credit Suisse AG Chief Executive
Tidjane Thiam said last week that around 1,800 jobs currently based
in London could be moved to cheaper locations such as Poland and
India. Earlier this month, HSBC Holdings PLC cut hundreds of U.K.
contractors' daily rates by 10% for the second year in a row.
"Big banks are becoming pruned, cut or chopped," said Bill
Michael, global head of banking and capital markets at KPMG.
"They're looking everywhere at costs, because the truth is their
return on equity is so low."
Some high-paid bankers and traders are now being forced to take
pay cuts, according to bank executives and recruiters. Other moves
include reductions in office space, simplification of corporate
structures and cutting ties to marquee sports.
This year Barclays PLC decided not to renew a GBP40
million-a-year ($61 million-a-year) deal to sponsor English Premier
League soccer. Novo Banco, the former Banco Espírito Santo SA
business that is now controlled by Portugal's central bank, ended a
sponsorship deal with Real Madrid player Cristiano Ronaldo.
Barclays also stands to save hundreds of thousands of dollars by
dissolving roughly 250 legal entities used for client deals and to
route banking business through the Cayman Islands and other
far-flung places.
Banks are squeezing their remaining employees into fewer
buildings. Barclays has leased out office space in New York no
longer needed by its shrunken investment bank. The once-lavish
executive suite at Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC's Edinburgh
headquarters, where former Chief Executive Fred Goodwin presided
before a GBP46 billion government bailout in 2008, has been turned
into office space for small business startups. The
government-controlled bank plans to roughly double the number of
people working at its Scottish head office, as other offices in
Edinburgh are shut.
Rank-and-file employees aren't the only ones being targeted.
Sabadell ordered bankers flying from Barcelona to London for
meetings at newly acquired British lender TSB Banking Group PLC to
take lower-cost flights to Gatwick airport instead of pricey
Heathrow. From there, they usually have to take a GBP20 train ride
rather than pay three times as much for a cab into the city
center.
Write to Margot Patrick at margot.patrick@wsj.com, Max
Colchester at max.colchester@wsj.com and Jeannette Neumann at
jeannette.neumann@wsj.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 29, 2015 06:24 ET (10:24 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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