Citigroup joined rivals including UBS Group in touting its flexible work policies as a tool that will offer a competitive edge in
The lender’s employees will have the option of working from home at least part time, investment banking co-head Manolo Falco said at a virtual press briefing on Wednesday. That will set the bank apart from some U.S. rivals that are taking a more hard-line approach to remote work, he said, naming JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs Group.
Global investment banks are broadly falling into two camps on their approach to flexible-work policies. While many in the U.S. are requiring staff to come back to the office, a growing number of European lenders, including UBS and Deutsche Bank, are saying that increased flexibility on a more permanent basis can improve staff morale and perhaps give them a
Read more:
Citigroup Chief Executive Officer Jane Fraser said in March, shortly after taking on the top job, that being in the office is important for competitiveness, collaboration and mentoring young staffers. But she said the majority of the lender’s roles will still be designated as
The plan is to open Citigroup’s offices in New York City’s Tribeca neighborhood to as much as 30% of its broader staff next month. The bank also
Goldman Sachs’s policy is more rigid. It’s requiring almost all U.S. employees to report to their desks. JPMorgan, similarly, is asking most of its U.S. workers to start regular office schedules July 6. And Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman recently fired off a
At Bank of America, the
Read more:
Citigroup’s position is closer to many of its