Thomson Reuters to cut jobs in finance unit

PTI Updated - March 12, 2018 at 03:18 PM.

Global media group Thomson Reuters said yesterday that it would cut 2,500 jobs in its financial products division by the end of the year as part of a cost-cutting drive.

Chief Executive James Smith announced the cuts as he released the company’s quarterly and annual financial results, saying the move “positions us for far greater improvement in 2014.”

Smith said 2012 “was a watershed year despite an economic environment that proved to be even more challenging than we had anticipated” and cited “numerous operational issues needing repair.”

In the company’s large financial unit, Smith said, “there is far more rigor, transparency and discipline” than in the past.

He said this unit known as Finance & Risk will trim 2,500 jobs by the end of 2013 as part of a drive “to improve profitability.”

“These are not easy decisions, but our cost structure has to meet our customers’ requirements,” he told a conference call.

Thomson Reuters reported its profit for the fourth quarter was $372 million, compared with a loss in the same period a year earlier of $2.6 billion due to a large writedown on its financial services business.

Thomson Reuters, which is incorporated in Canada and has its headquarters in New York, said its full-year 2012 profit rose to $2.1 billion from $1.4 billion the prior year.

The adjusted profit per share amounted to 60 cents a share in the past quarter, slightly better than expected on Wall Street.

Revenues fell five percent to $3.4 billion over the quarter and were down four percent for the year at $13.3 billion.

Smith said 2012 “will best be known as the year we turned the tide in our Financial & Risk business. I said last year that our journey would entail a multi-quarter turnaround; we are halfway through that process.”

Thomson Reuters was created in 2008 with Canadian media giant Thomson Corp’s takeover of British-based Reuters. It operates a number of financial and legal information services as well as the Reuters news agency.

The media operations represented just a small portion of the company with 2012 revenues at $331 million, from $336 million in 2011.

The largest segment, headed under Finance & Risk, accounted for $7.2 billion in revenues, a drop of one per cent over the past year.

Published on February 14, 2013 06:27