Barclays is to axe at least 3,700 jobs and prune its investment bank, under a restructuring plan launched by its new chief executive which seeks to cut 1.7 billion pounds (approximately Rs 14,341 crore) in annual costs and improve standards.
The plans form part of an overhaul, which CEO Antony Jenkins hopes, will convince a sceptical public that he will change a bank which has been dogged by a series of scandals, including a $450 million (approximately Rs 2,423 crore) fine for rigging interbank lending rates or Libor.
"Believe me, I understand the cynics and the sceptics out there, but cynics and sceptics never built anything. It will take years before people actually change their impression of us. I'm not daunted by that at all," Jenkins told BBC radio.
Barclays also unveiled plans to pay its investment bankers an average bonus of 54,100 pounds (aprrox. Rs 45 lakh), down 17 percent on the year before. Bonuses across the bank will total 1.85 billion pounds (approx. Rs 15,606 crore), down 14 percent on the year.
Jenkins said the job cuts will include 1,800 in corporate and investment banking and 1,900 in its European retail