Citigroup, Goldman Said to Begin Eliminating 12,300 Jobs
By Josh Fineman and Christine Harper

 Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Citigroup Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.,
faced with a weakening economy and the prospect of mounting losses,
began firing workers as part of the firms' plans to cut more than
12,000 jobs, people with knowledge of the matter said.

Goldman, which converted last month from the biggest U.S. securities
firm into a commercial bank, yesterday began telling about 3,200
employees, or 10 percent of its workforce, they were out of a job,
according to one of the people who declined to be identified because
the decisions were confidential.

Citigroup has been notifying staff this week who are affected by the
bank's plan to discard 9,100 positions over the next 12 months, or
about 2.6 percent of its headcount, another person said.

The ousted workers add to the swelling ranks of Wall Street's
unemployed, their lives upended by the credit crisis. Both New York-
based firms have already cut staff, and are among the banks and
brokerages worldwide that have shed almost 150,000 jobs since the
subprime mortgage market collapsed last year. Led by Chief Executive
Officer Lloyd Blankfein, Goldman said in April it would fire more
after culling about 1,500 underperformers. Vikram Pandit, Citigroup's
CEO, shed 12,900 over the past year.

``We haven't hit bottom yet,'' said Henry Higdon, managing partner at
Higdon Partners LLC, a New York-based search firm specializing in
financial services. ``They have to adjust the size of their businesses
to the realities, not only today, but what it's going to look like in
the next two or three years.''

Spokespeople at Goldman and Citigroup declined to comment. Goldman was
down less than 1 percent at $86.71 in German trading today and
Citigroup fell 18 cents to $12.45.

Weaker Growth

Goldman, which employed 32,569 people as of Aug. 29, may report its
first quarterly loss next month since the company went public in 1999,
according to analysts at Merrill Lynch & Co. and UBS AG. Stock market
declines will cause Goldman to write down the value of equity stakes
owned by the company in the fourth quarter that ends this month, the
analysts said.

At Citigroup, Pandit has been trimming costs and unloading assets
after the company reported four straight quarterly losses. Employees
in the bank's sales and trading unit may be fired in the latest round
of cuts, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.
Citigroup's global workforce numbered about 352,000 at the end of
September.

Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and rivals such as Merrill Lynch & Co. have
been reducing staff as the revenue outlook dims for banks and
securities firms.

Most major global stock indexes have dropped more than 25 percent this
year, with the Standard & Poor's 500 down 35 percent and the Hang Seng
Index down 50 percent. The International Monetary Fund's World
Economic Outlook forecast last month that global growth will weaken to
3 percent in 2009, from 3.9 percent this year and 5 percent in 2007.

Girding for Recession

``The economy is in a deepening recession,'' Jan Hatzius, Goldman's
chief U.S. economist, said yesterday.

Citigroup, in the past year, has disclosed plans to eliminate 22,000
jobs, resulting in expenses of about $2.1 billion. Of the 22,000,
about 9,100 remain to be cut over the next 12 months, Chief Financial
Officer Gary Crittenden said on a conference call with analysts last
month.

A person briefed on Goldman's plans said last month that the company,
the only firm among Wall Street's five biggest to remain profitable
throughout the credit crisis, would shed about 3,200 workers.

Merrill, which is being acquired by Bank of America Corp., is cutting
about 500 jobs in its trading division as it girds for a recession,
three people with knowledge of the plan said last month. The cuts
amount to about 1 percent of New York-based Merrill's 60,900
employees.

Citigroup has disclosed plans during the past year to eliminate more
jobs than any other financial institution, according to data compiled
by Bloomberg. UBS, Merrill and Wachovia Corp. are among companies that
have disclosed more than 5,000 job reductions.

To contact the reporter on this story: Josh Fineman in New York at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Christine Harper in New York at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Last Updated: November 6, 2008 06:00 EST
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