Commerzbank offers early retirement to 3,000 officials

Bloomberg

Commerzbank AG has sent out early retirement offers to about 3,000 employees, a first key step in the German lender’s move towards cutting 9,600 jobs over four years, two people with knowledge of the matter said.
The offer entitles eligible employees born before 1962 to a 30,000-euro ($34,000) sweetener, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing internal affairs. Some employees will have until the end of June to decide and others until the end of August, according to the people. The average salary at the bank in 2016 was about 79,600 euros, based on total salary and wage costs of 3.5 billion euros and 44,267 employees.
Chief Executive Officer Martin Zielke unveiled a turnaround strategy in September that calls for automating operations and shedding about a fifth of the workforce to cut costs after a slump in earnings.
Under his predecessor Martin Blessing, the bank eliminated 5,200 jobs to counter volatile markets and record-low interest rates. A spokesman for the bank declined to comment.
Commerzbank’s corporate client division will be hardest hit, shrinking by about 2,400 employees at the end of 2020, according to an internal document seen by Bloomberg. That compares with 6,611 at the end of 2016. The number includes transfers to other units as well as the planned spinoff of the equity markets and commodities unit. The aim is to reduce staff at Frankfurt headquarters to 7,419 from 9,840 through 2020, the document shows.
The final target numbers are likely to differ from the initial targets as they are subject to negotiations with the workers’ council, another person said.

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