Reports
Danske Bank Pushes Ahead With Job Cuts

The Copenhagen-based lender, whose activities include wealth management, is implementing job reductions as previously announced this year.
  Danske Bank
  yesterday said it has laid off 257 employees across the
  organisation as part of its 2023 plan to reduce costs, a move
  that was flagged
  in October. The Copenhagen-based lender is recovering from a
  damaging scandal over anti-money laundering control failings
  linked to the Baltic region.
  
  The bank said that in addition to the layoffs, 261 employees in
  Denmark have applied for and been granted a voluntary redundancy
  agreement. The layoffs and voluntary redundancies form part of
  the discontinuation of up to 1,600 positions over a period of six
  to 12 months announced in October.
  
  The job cuts compare with a total payroll of more than 22,000
  people.
  
  “We are undertaking a major transformation to adapt to the
  structural changes that are happening in the financial sector.
  That requires us to reduce costs significantly and, sadly, we
  cannot avoid layoffs in this connection,” Karsten Breum, member
  of the executive leadership team of Danske Bank and head of human
  resources, said. 
  
  “We continue to look at all cost types and other measures to
  reduce the number of layoffs necessary, just as we make every
  effort to carry out the discontinuation of positions in the most
  respectful and considerate way we can," Breum said.
  
  Of the total 257 positions that are discontinued, 155 are in
  Denmark, 26 in Norway, 35 in Sweden and 41 in Finland.
  
  In September Danske said it was setting up a commercial
  leadership team. The new simplified structure with two business
  units – Personal and Business Customers and Large Corporates and
  Institutions – takes effect from January 2021, at which time the
  new CLT will also be established.
  
  The past decade has been a troubled one for the group. Danske
  replaced its chief executive and made a number of other changes
  in the wake of a money laundering episode centred on the Baltic
  state of Estonia. The affair snowballed into a broader European
  money laundering episode, 
  raising calls for tougher AML controls across the European
  Union. In May 2019 the lender appointed Chris Vogelzang,
  a former senior figure at ABN AMRO, as its new chief executive.
  He took over from interim CEO Jesper Nielsen who had held the
  position after the resignation of Thomas F Borgen in 2018.