ABN Amro Slashes 60% of Senior Management After Staff Cuts

ABN Amro NV plans cut 60 of its 100 senior management jobs and reduce the number of top executives by more than half in a revamp that reflects the bank’s shrinking size.
A new management board will include the heads of retail, commercial, corporate and institutional, and private banking, the Amsterdam-based lender said in a statement on Monday. It will include Chief Executive Officer Kees van Dijkhuizen as well as the vice chairman and a chief financial officer who hasn’t yet been appointed.
‘ABN Amro has done a lot of restructuring and I think the top structure was not completely aligned with the rest of the company,’ said Bart Horsten, an Amsterdam-based analyst at Kempen & Co who rates the stock buy. ‘It will make the company a bit more lean and mean in terms of decision making.’
ABN Amro, which is 70 percent owned by the Dutch government following a state rescue, said in November it would cut 1,500 jobs as it steps up cost reductions. The bank, which employed 26,500 people last year, said its total workforce is expected to decline by 13 percent by 2020. The Dutch government has said it plans to gradually exit its holding in the bank.

This post was published at bloomberg