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Australia's ANZ Cuts 70 Jobs In Wealth Arm
Chrissy Coleman
21 February 2013
Australia's ANZ is cutting 70 positions from its wealth management arm, the firm has told WealthBriefingAsia, (sister website to this publication). This news comes following the announcement made this week by
Australia’s Finance Sector Union that ANZ advised 131 employees their
jobs will be off-shored to India in coming months. ANZ said the majority of the impacted roles are based in Sydney and
are mainly back-office type positions. It added that affected staff
members will have access to support services and be able to apply for
other roles within the bank. “These changes reflect the need to simplify our business given the
more subdued economic environment and to ensure our customers are
supported,” a spokesperson for ANZ told this publication in an emailed
statement. Cost cutting ANZ recently reported a 6.2 per cent jump in net profit for the
period ending 31 December 2012, with the group’s chief executive, Mike
Smith, saying: “Initiatives to manage costs and margins helped to
sustain a good performance in the Australia division.” According to FSU, the jobs targeted for off-shoring involve
administration of the pension funds of high net worth individuals. The
bank advised the organisation that the off-shoring proposition is
designed to “minimise duplication and bureaucracy and improve our
business resilience.” At an investor briefing held in November last year by ANZ’s
chief executive for private wealth management, Joyce Phillips, she cited
cost-cutting as an important topic for the bank. However, she also
spoke of investing $80 to A=$100 million per year into the bank, for the
next five years. The APAC region was named a central part of its growth strategy,
Phillips said: “On a global basis, wealth is rapidly shifting to Asia
Pacific - in five years, from 2011-2016, our region’s share of private
wealth will increase from 19 to 27 per cent. This clearly represents a
tremendous opportunity to leverage ANZ’s regional presence and in
particular, to create a strong regional private bank.”