While shareholders toast to record returns, the workforce is staring down the barrel of a brutal restructuring. CEO Sergio Ermotti has confirmed that the next and most significant wave of job cuts will strike in the second half of 2026. This is not a drill; it is a scheduled demolition. The integration of Credit Suisse, while financially lucrative, demands a sacrifice, and the headcount is the primary target.
Switzerland will bear a heavy burden, with approximately 3,000 local redundancies confirmed. Globally, the picture is even grimmer. Media reports indicate a ruthless efficiency drive aiming to slash the total workforce from an initial 115,000 down to just 80,000. The bank has already shed 1,250 full-time positions in the last quarter of 2025 alone. Ermotti promises that the process will be implemented "as gently as possible," with talk of retraining and internal transfers, but for a workforce already reduced to 103,200, the anxiety is palpable. The "gentle" removal of thousands of livelihoods remains a paradox that only corporate logic can sustain.