Friday, November 21, 2008

BANKING NEWS - AIBEA - 11.11.2008

Fed Reserve to cut 10 area jobs

The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta plans to cut 10 jobs in the Birmingham area as it moves its paper check operations to Cleveland, Ohio.
The Fed announced Thursday it would move its nationwide paper check-processing and adjustments division to the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.
As a result, 65 employees of the Atlanta branch’s Jacksonville, Fla., office will be cut when the transition is made by the end of 2009, said Pierce Nelson, assistant vice president and public information officer at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta.
Also, 45 employees within the district that report to the Jacksonville office, which include 10 in Birmingham who work from their homes, will eventually be eliminated.
The Federal Reserve Banks announced last year it would reduce its paper check services as check volumes declined. Last month, it cut another 57 employees from the Jacksonville office to move the districts electronic check processing operations to Atlanta, according to the Jacksonville Business Journal, sister publication to the Birmingham Business Journal.

DBS to cut 900 jobs
Layoffs will be across all levels, mostly in S'pore and Hong Kong
By Gabriel Chen
THE axe has started falling in corporate Singapore with DBS Group Holdings announcing sharp job cuts yesterday that will see 900 workers - or 6 per cent of its staff - gone by Christmas.
Slightly over half will be from Singapore, the bank said.
The shock news came on a day when DBS reported its steepest profit fall in two years and amid controversy over investments it sold which are now worthless.
There are also growing fears that the cuts are just the first in what could be a stream of job losses as blue chip firms and small operations scale back in the face of the economic slowdown.
The bank announced the cuts at a town hall meeting of more than 1,000 employees at Suntec City and via video link to about 500 workers from other units, including Hong Kong, Indonesia and China.
It said the layoffs are part of plans to streamline and restructure the giant banking group, which, like many around the world, is battling the effects of a financial sector crisis.
Most of the affected DBS employees will be from the Singapore and Hong Kong units with all divisions and all levels of seniority affected. DBS employs about 7,600 staff here and 4,200 in Hong Kong.
DBS sources said the IT department, backroom operations and frontline service staff are likely to feel the most pain from the cuts.
Recruiters like Mr Gary Lai, front office banking manager of search firm Robert Walters, think the consumer banking division could also take a hit since DBS 'has been aggressively expanding over the last few years' on that front.
The staff cuts are the largest since 2001, when DBS slashed 700 jobs or 5 per cent of its total staff. About 200 Singapore employees were let go then.
DBS chief executive Richard Stanley told a briefing yesterday that the staff earmarked to go have yet to be told.
'This is a painful decision for DBS, and for me personally, but something we've had to bite the bullet and do in a difficult environment,' said Mr Stanley, who took over the helm in May.
The move to restructure and streamline the group may not be 'popular', but needs to be done in order to be more productive and efficient, he said.
'To be a more streamlined organisation, we must run a tighter ship.'
He also said the layoffs were not a reflection of the bank's financial position.
'DBS remains strong and sound,' he said, adding that the extent of cost savings will only be reported in the next quarter.
Details of the compensation package were not revealed but it is expected to be in line with the market standard of a month's salary for each year of service.
Mr Stanley would not say if the cuts will also affect employees at POSB.
Some DBS employees told The Straits Times that they were 'quite prepared' for the layoffs as foreign banks such as Merrill Lynch, Standard Chartered and UBS had already been cutting jobs here.
But others had thought that Mr Stanley, a genial banker often described as a 'people person', would not resort to job cuts in a bid to increase efficiency.
Ms Nora Kang, president of the DBS Staff Union, said that the union will 'walk through this journey with all affected members' to ensure a smooth transition.
She added that the union had approached the NTUC's training institute to develop suitable training programmes for members.
Mr Stanley stressed yesterday that the 'restructuring exercise' was not related to the alleged mis-selling of products linked to now-bankrupt US investment bank Lehman Brothers.
CIMB-GK economist Song Seng Wun said the DBS layoffs are only the beginning and that the real economy will be hit with unemployment across all sectors - from hospitality-related services to manufacturing - and not just finance.
'If you talk about a global slowdown, the demand for all goods and services will drop, and it's going to hit all jobs hard,' Mr Song said.
Still, Singapore's deputy labour chief Heng Chee How maintained yesterday that retrenchments would remain relatively low this year at about 10,000 jobs.
'That is because this recession has just started towards the end of the year, so we think that the unemployment and retrenchment numbers will go up next year,' he told Channel News Asia.
He added that some companies are also going for reduced hours to cut costs and that it is now even more crucial to ramp up retraining.

GDP, consumer spending contract as US plunges into recession
By Patrick O’Connor 31 October 2008
Gross domestic product (GDP) figures released yesterday by the Commerce Department show that the US economy shrank by 0.3 percent on an annualised basis in the three months from July to September. With economists expecting even poorer GDP figures for the fourth quarter, the latest data confirms that the economy has now entered into severe recession.
Negative GDP growth for the third quarter was driven by a 3.1 percent decline in consumer spending, the first such contraction since 1991 and the largest fall recorded since 1980.
Consumer spending, partly fuelled by personal debt, has accounted for more than two-thirds of all economic activity in the last period. But mounting layoffs, home foreclosures, credit card defaults, the rising cost of living and the declining value of retirement savings have had a devastating impact on broad layers of the population. The Commerce Department reported an extraordinary 8.7 percent third quarter decline in disposable personal income—that is, income after taxes and adjusted for inflation. This is the largest fall ever recorded since figures were first kept in 1947.
Disposable income in the second quarter had increased by 11.9 percent on an annualised basis due to tax rebates from the Bush administration's emergency economic stimulus package.
Unsurprisingly, spending has declined together with incomes. In the three months up to October, purchases of non-durable goods—smaller purchases such as food and clothing items—plunged by 6.4 percent, the biggest decline since 1950. Spending on durable goods, such as cars and furniture, declined by 14.1 percent.
Housing investment plunged 19.1 percent on an annualised basis. Also recorded in the GDP data was a decline of 1 percent in "real non-residential fixed investment," that is, business investment in capital items including machinery, vehicles, and computers. The New York Times described this as "a worrying sign of a new, potentially pernicious phase of the downturn."
The third quarter 0.3 percent GDP decline was not as severe as had been anticipated. Stock markets lifted marginally yesterday, with the Dow Jones closing 2.1 percent higher. Goldman Sachs economists, however, warned their clients that the GDP report was "weaker than implied by the initial market reaction."
The data would have been significantly worse had it not been for a narrower trade deficit caused by continuing export growth to Europe and Asia. This growth has since ceased and exports are in decline as the world economy follows the American into steep recession. Also preventing a sharper drop in third quarter GDP was federal government spending and investment, which was up 13.8 percent on an annualised basis, largely due to an 18.1 percent rise in military expenditure.
The Wall Street Journal noted that the latest data indicated that the economy probably entered into recession "before the mid-September credit freeze," and that fourth quarter GDP growth could be as low as negative 4 percent.
"The economy has taken a turn for the worse, big time," Allen Sinai, chief global economist for Decision Economics, told the New York Times. "Consumption literally caved in. It is a prelude to much worse news on the economy over the next couple of quarters. The fundamentals around the consumer are all negative, and there are no signs of any help anytime soon, from anywhere."
Paul Ashworth, of London-based Capital Economics Ltd, told Reuters he expects the US economy to shrink by 1.5 percent in 2009 and remain stagnant in 2010. "Overall, we expect the level of GDP to shrink by a total of 2.5 percent, which would make this one of the worst recessions since the Great Depression," he said.
Labor Department data showed 479,000 new jobless claims in the week ending October 25, steady from the week before. Economists generally regard a figure above 400,000 as an indicator of recession. Reuters added: "Analysts estimated so-called continued claims would be 3.74 million. It was the 27th straight week that claims were above three million in a sign that the ailing economy is making it harder for US workers to find employment."
An estimated 760,000 jobs have been slashed this year, and the rate of layoffs is accelerating.
Yesterday saw the following job cuts and corporate earnings announcements:
* Credit card giant American Express is to lay off nearly 10 percent of its workforce, or 7,000 workers, as part of a restructuring plan aimed at reducing costs by $1.8 billion by the end of 2009.
* Electronics and phone company Motorola reported a $397 million loss for the third quarter, largely due to falling mobile phone sales. It plans to sack an additional 3,000 staff.
* Computer gaming company Electronic Arts will cut 6 percent of its workforce amid falling retail sales that delivered a net loss of $310 million for the quarter.
* Photographics company Eastman Kodak released lower than expected quarterly profit figures and said it would eliminate an unspecified number of jobs in coming months.
* Broadcaster CBS recorded a $12.6 billion quarterly loss after it wrote down the value of its media assets by $14 billion.
* Paper and packaging company International Paper reported a 31 percent quarterly profit decline compared to 2007. The company laid off workers and closed plants earlier this year in Georgia, California, Ohio and Oregon, but warned that falling demand "could mean more capacity cuts."
Job losses continue to mount in the devastated auto industry. Three Michigan-based auto suppliers made layoff announcements yesterday:
* Visteon Corp., a Ford auto-parts spin-off, said yesterday it suffered a $188 million net quarterly loss. The company cut about 2,000 hourly and salaried jobs in the last three months, and plans to cut its salaried workforce by a further 800.
* TRW Automotive Holdings Corp. posted a third-quarter loss of $54 million. CEO John Plant said the company would continue to "right size" its workforce. About 1,000 salaried positions are being cut, with the majority to take effect by the end of this week.
* Citing "recessionary conditions in North America and increasing weakness in Europe," Lear Corp. reported a $98 million quarterly loss. The company said it aims to save $150 million over the next year through layoffs, but has not yet announced the number of jobs to be cut.
Layoffs in the auto sector are set to massively escalate in the aftermath of a potential government-funded merger between General Motors and Chrysler.
Kimberly Rodriguez of the accounting firm Grant Thornton LLP told the Wall Street Journal she expects such a merger to result in between 30,000 to 40,000 Chrysler job losses, with another 50,000 auto suppliers' jobs affected. The auto analyst predicted that 7 of Chrysler's 14 auto assembly plants would close and 19 of the company's 26 car models would be eliminated.
If the merger deal failed to go through, Rodriguez said, Chrysler could collapse, in turn leading to bankruptcies of auto suppliers upon which GM and Ford also depend. "What you would have is a shutdown of the auto industry," she concluded.

New CMD for United Bank
Business Line / Kolkata / Nov. 7
Mr Satish C. Gupta has taken over as Chairman and Managing Director of United Bank of India. Mr Gupta was earlier the Executive Director of Bank of Baroda since June 2007, a press statement here said.
J.M. Garg is CorpORATION Bank CMD
Business Line / Mangalore / Nov. 7
Mr Jag Mohan Garg has been appointed as Chairman and Managing Director of Corporation Bank. The bank informed the BSE that Mr Garg joined the bank on November 6. Prior to this, Mr Garg was Executive Director of Punjab National Bank.
New ED appointments
Business Line / New Delhi / Nov. 7
Mr Narendra, General Manager, Corporation Bank, has been appointed as Executive Director of Bank of India, while Mr Rajeev Kumar Bakshi, currently General Manager, Bank of India, has been appointed as Executive Director, Bank of Baroda.

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