news.yahoo.com :
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')anks worldwide are shedding jobs as stricter regulations and euro zone worries take their toll on trading income and investment banking units. Many began outlining layoffs plans 18 months ago and are now cutting more deeply as they reassess their entire business to cope with tougher capital rules, while some are cutting because of acquisitions or mergers they are involved in. Staff cuts announced since mid-2011 or reported to be in the works at major banks have now reached 158,000.
Below are aggregates of various redundancy rounds. They are likely to be conservative figures, as not all banks have announced lay-offs publicly, and the number does not take into account smaller investment banks, boutiques and brokers. The data also shows the net job losses (or job additions) at these firms since the end of 2009, when the euro zone debt crisis began.
BANK Cut plans* Total staff**
HSBC 30,000 267,000
BANK OF AMERICA 30,000 272,594
LLOYDS 15,000 95,975
UBS 13,500 63,745
ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND 6,418 140,300
UNICREDIT 6,150 157,190
ING 5,050 94,000
INTESA SANPAOLO 5,000 97,144
MONTE DEI PASCHI DI SIENA 4,600 30,422
CITIGROUP 4,500 262,000
MORGAN STANLEY c.4,333 57,726
BARCLAYS 3,922 139,000
CREDIT SUISSE 3,500 48,400
...
And the list continues. The total would be higher as certain layoffs which the companies have refused to publicly confirm or report have not been included. No matter how you look at it, a body count of 160,000 is a big number - so much for the small slice of good news earlier on in the automotive sector (Chrysler).