Lloyds to cut 3,000 jobs and axe 200 branches – but it’s nothing to do with Brexit
Part state-funded bank wants to save £1.4billion by the end of next year
LLOYDS Bank is cutting 3,000 jobs and axing 200 branches as the banking group braces for a cut in interest rates following Britain's vote for Brexit.
The part state-backed bank said a cost-cutting programme announced in 2014 will be extended and the "expected lower for longer interest rate environment" will see the new cuts come into effect by the end of 2017.
Th bank today said: "The decision to close these branches was made before the Brexit vote and is not linked to the result."
The Bank of England is widely expected to cut interest rates from 0.5 per cent to 0.25 per cent next week as the fallout from the Brexit vote intensifies.
Lloyds is targeting £1.4 billion in cost savings by the end of next year.
The bank made the announcement alongside results for the first half of the year, which saw statutory profits more than double to £2.5 billion, but the lender warned that Brexit could have an adverse impact on its future performance.
"Given the uncertainty, it is too early to determine the impact on our formal longer term guidance at this stage.
"However, while the business will remain highly capital generative, it is possible that this capital generation may be somewhat lower in future years than previously guided," the bank said.
The total number of jobs cut since the announcement of an efficiency drive in 2014 will stand at 12,000 by the end of next year.
The latest 200 branch closures come on top of another 200 already earmarked for closure at Lloyds, which is 9 per cent owned by the Government. The total comes to nearly a fifth of the 2,251 UK branches which the group had at the beginning of 2015.
Chief executive Antonio Horta-Osorio said: "Following the EU referendum the outlook for the UK economy is uncertain and, while the precise impact is dependent upon a number of factors including EU negotiations and political and economic events, a deceleration of growth seems likely.
"The UK, however, enters this period of uncertainty from a position of strength, following continued private sector deleveraging, significantly improved mortgage affordability and low levels of unemployment."
RELATED STORIES
Rob MacGregor, national officer at union Unite, said: "There is a real danger that customer service will suffer and access to banking for numerous communities will be damaged because of this latest round of savage cuts. Over the coming days and weeks Unite will be in talks with Lloyds to understand the announcement in detail, pressing it for guarantees over compulsory redundancies and warning it against cutting too far too fast.
"Lloyds should be in no doubt that Unite will oppose all compulsory redundancies and will be doing everything in its power to ensure that those employees who wish to continue working for the banking group do so."