LONDON, June 23 (Xinhua) -- The pace of job losses in
the investment banking industry is feared to accelerate over the summer after
Goldman Sachs cut staff at its investment banking division last week, the
Financial Times reported Monday.
The Wall Street bank is now expected to cut up to 10 percent of staff in the division that handles mergers
and acquisition advice and corporate fundraisings over the course of 2008, with
a fresh round of trimming starting last week, the report said.
Goldman, in common with the rest of the industry, has
been gradually shedding staff this year, or sending bankers previously based in
the U.S. and Europe to the Middle East and Asia, where business remains buoyant.
Wall Street rival Citigroup is already in the midst
of a 10 percent reduction to its 65,000 strong investment banking staff. People
at the bank said about half of the layoffs had already been made, with further
cuts likely in the coming weeks.
However, job losses across the industry have been
less severe than many had expected this year, and Goldman's heightened pessimism
about its need to retain its more experienced staff during the rest of 2008
could prove a pretext for other banks to wield the axe with greater force, said
the newspaper.
Job losses are reportedly gathering pace in Europe,
which bankers say is lagging behind the U.S. in adapting to the economic
slowdown.
Last week, Credit Suisse confirmed a fresh round of
75 job cuts in investment banking and support services in Britain, a move which
it said reflected market conditions.
About 11,000 jobs are feared to be lost in London
this year, and a further 8,200 in 2009, according to a report from the Center
for Economics and Business Research.