UniCredit CEO Orcel Has Quietly Axed 7,700 Jobs in Two Years

Soon after UniCredit SpA Chief Executive Officer Andrea Orcel took the helm of Italy’s second-largest bank two years ago, it was clear he would begin trimming a workforce he saw as getting in the way of better profitability.

(Bloomberg) — Soon after UniCredit SpA Chief Executive Officer Andrea Orcel took the helm of Italy’s second-largest bank two years ago, it was clear he would begin trimming a workforce he saw as getting in the way of better profitability.

The scale of the cuts is becoming clear. The Milan-based bank’s full-time equivalent employees stood at 74,322 at the end of March, down about 7,700, or roughly 10%, from the level at the end of the first quarter in 2021, according to filings published Wednesday. The lender had never set a public target for the cuts.  

UniCredit has a presence in 13 countries and is one of the few true cross-border European banks, a fact that brings complexity that Orcel has worked to control. Since becoming CEO in April 2021 Orcel has slimmed down the ranks of top management and cut back on the co-head structures that were a legacy of his predecessor Jean Pierre Mustier. The bank has also reduced bureaucracy and back-office duplication, while investing in front-line staff.

UniCredit’s operating costs were down in the first quarter, while revenue increased 18%, “confirming the group’s ability to structurally reduce the cost base while protecting revenue growth,” Orcel said during a conference call commenting on first quarter earnings on Wednesday. “This is despite significant inflationary pressure.” The bank has improved both cost and revenue guidance for 2023, but hasn’t given any further details on its future job reduction plans. 

The reductions were mostly made in Italy, with 2,900 net cuts, followed by 1,600 net exits in Germany and 1,200 in Austria, the bank said. Over the period the bank, hired about 10,800 people for its network and digital functions. 

Read More: UniCredit Boosts Profit, Payout Targets After Record Quarter 

Last year the bank announced a reduction of the number of staff at international hubs and moved deposit-taking and lending activity handled by representative offices including London, Mumbai, Singapore, Beijing, Tokyo, Shanghai and Hong Kong to core countries in Europe. The bank also cut staff in Germany and Austria and has rearranged Italian operations under the direct responsibility of the CEO.

In Italy, redundancies were made on a voluntary basis and eased by early-retirement and social support policies, while new hires were also made over the period in core businesses. The bank said on Wednesday it hired 200 people for the branch network in the first quarter.

 

–With assistance from Antonio Vanuzzo.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.