Credit Suisse could cut 10 pct of European investment bankers

Credit Suisse could cut 10 pct of European investment bankers

ZURICH

Credit Suisse could slash more than 10 percent of its investment banking staff in Europe, the Financial Times newspaper reported, with the beleaguered Swiss lender declining to comment yesterday.

Switzerland’s second-biggest bank “already let hundreds of staff go in London and Zurich last month,” the British financial daily reported on Jan. 14.

The Zurich-based bank declined to comment when contacted by AFP.

“Consultations over the next round of redundancies started before Christmas, with more than 10 percent of investment banking jobs in Europe under discussion,” the FT said, citing unnamed sources with knowledge of the talks.

“A final decision is expected next month,” the newspaper said.

Credit Suisse launched a vast restructuring plan in October, including shedding 9,000 jobs by 2025, more than 17 percent of its workforce.

Shaken by a string of scandals, the bank intends to refocus on the most stable parts of its business and radically overhaul its investment banking arm, which has suffered heavy losses.

Among the changes, it is reviving its First Boston brand, named after a U.S. investment bank it absorbed in 1990, where its capital market and advisory activities will be brought together.