For Wall Street Workers, Ax Falls Quietly
Saturday, May 17th, 2008This is an excerpt from a New York Times story published May 16, 2008. Click on the link to read the entire article:
“People on Wall Street seem to be vanishing overnight.
JoAnne Kennedy was laid off by JPMorgan Chase while she was recovering from surgery.
Thousands are losing their jobs as hard-pressed banks cut deep. But while layoffs are nothing new in the financial industry (they come with almost every downturn), this round seems different: it is eerily quiet.
So quiet, in fact, that people refer to these cuts as stealth layoffs. Some bosses hardly say a word after people are fired. At Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, for example, the first clue that someone is gone can be e-mail messages that are returned to senders from a former colleague’s inactivated corporate address.
While the financial markets have found a bit of a footing lately, banks are pushing ahead with plans for some of the deepest job reductions in years. Since last summer, banks worldwide have announced plans to cut 65,000 employees. …”


