PostFinance Announces Major Job Cuts Amid Market Pressures
State-owned financial institution to eliminate 141 positions in Bern as part of strategic restructuring to address market challenges
State-owned financial institution to eliminate 141 positions in Bern as part of strategic restructuring to address market challenges

"Standing idly by and watching is unthinkable."
"Efficiency and cost discipline are prerequisites for growth."
PostFinance is dropping the hammer on its workforce, announcing a sweeping reduction of up to 141 positions in a move that sends shockwaves through the Swiss public sector. The state-owned financial giant has confirmed that the cuts will strike hardest at the administrative heart of the organization in Bern, signaling a dramatic shift in operational priorities. This is not a minor adjustment; it is a calculated restructuring designed to stop the bleeding before it starts.
By the end of November 2025, the landscape of the companyâs Bern operations will look radically different. Beyond the 141 terminations, the institution is forcing through 73 contractual adjustments, affecting over 200 employees in total. This aggressive maneuver underscores the severity of the situation facing one of Switzerland's most recognizable financial brands. The consultation procedure has already commenced, marking the beginning of a tense period for the workforce. As the subsidiary of Swiss Post tightens its belt, the message is clear: stability is no longer guaranteed, even in state-backed strongholds.
A perfect storm of economic pressures is battering the Swiss financial landscape, and PostFinance is not immune. The institution grapples with a volatile cocktail of investor uncertainty and a punishing interest rate environment that has worsened significantly in recent months. Management has been blunt: the status quo is unsustainable. The pressure is mounting, and the financial headwinds are too strong to ignore.
"The challenges posed by market volatility... are putting PostFinance under pressure," the company stated, painting a grim picture of the external forces at play. This isn't just about internal efficiency; it is a defensive reaction to a hostile market. The volatility in global markets has eroded the comfortable margins of the past, forcing the bank to confront a harsh reality. To survive and eventually thrive, the institution must navigate through this "difficult interest rate environment" with a leaner, more agile vessel. The days of passive growth are over; the market now demands aggressive adaptation.
Efficiency is the new currency at PostFinance. The leadership argues that "efficiency and cost discipline are prerequisites for growth," a mantra that now justifies the shedding of administrative weight. The strategy is twofold: strengthen the institution's market position and ruthlessly focus on customer needs. However, this pivot requires capital, and the bank is freeing up resources the only way it currently canâby cutting costs.
The goal is to bolster the interest-independent business, a critical move to diversify revenue streams in an unpredictable economy. But this transition requires time and significant investment. Management is effectively stripping down the engine to rebuild it for a different kind of race. They are banking on the fact that a leaner organizational model will improve profitability in the long run. This is a high-stakes gamble on future performance, where the immediate price is paid in jobs and organizational upheaval.
CEO Beat Röthlisberger is not mincing words. "Standing idly by and watching is unthinkable," he declared, framing the cuts as a painful but absolute duty to the company's future. While acknowledging that the news is "painful" and will cause "uncertainty and concern," the leadership remains steadfast. The narrative is one of survival and competitiveness; the emotional toll on employees is the collateral damage of necessary corporate evolution.
The company has promised that if redundancies are unavoidable, well-structured social plans negotiated with social partners will be implemented. "We will be accompanying them closely during this phase," Röthlisberger assured, attempting to soften the blow. However, for the hundreds of employees in Bern facing termination or contract changes, these assurances may offer little comfort. As the consultation period unfolds, the tension between corporate duty and social responsibility will be tested in the public eye.