Ex-Citi chief says 30% of bank jobs at risk from technology

epa00157115 (FILES) Pedestrians are relected in a CITIBANK sign in downtown Tokyo, 08 March 2004. A magnetic tape kept in Singapore that contains information on 123,690 customer accounts at Citibank's Japan unit has been missing since last month, officials at the Japan arm of the U.S. bank said Friday, 19 March 2004. They said it was not immediately known whether the data have been leaked to a third party. Citibank will send a written apology and explanation the each customer whose information is missing. The bank will assume responsibility and take appropriate steps if customers suffer any disadvantage from the incident, Citibank said.  EPA/ANDY RAIN

Bloomberg

Vikram Pandit, who ran Citigroup Inc. during the financial crisis, said developments in technology could see some 30 percent of banking jobs disappearing in the next five years.
Artificial intelligence and robotics reduce the need for staff in roles such as back-office functions, Pandit, 60, said. He’s now chief executive officer of Orogen Group, an investment firm that he co-founded last year.
“Everything that happens with artificial intelligence, robotics and natural language—all of that is going to make processes easier,” said Pandit, who was Citigroup’s chief executive officer from 2007 to 2012. “It’s going to change the back office.”
Wall Street’s biggest firms are using technologies including machine learning and cloud computing to automate their operations, forcing many employees to adapt or find new positions. Bank of America Corp.’s Chief Operating Officer Tom Montag saidthe firm will keep cutting costs by finding more ways technology can replace people.
While Pandit’s forecast for job losses is in step with one made by Citigroup last year, his timeline is more aggressive. In a March 2016 report, the lender estimated a 30 percent reduction between 2015 and 2025, mainly due to automation in retail banking. That would see full-time jobs drop by 770,000 in the US and by about 1 million in Europe, Citigroup said.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon cautioned in June against overreacting to the impact of technology on jobs. While the bank is using technology to reduce costs, that helps create other opportunities, Dimon said. He predicted that employee numbers at his firm will continue to rise—as it hires more technology workers. The banking industry is becoming “enormously competitive,” Pandit said, adding that he foresees the emergence of “specialist providers” as well as consolidation in the industry.
Since leaving the firm, Pandit has invested in non-bank financial startups.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend