PARIS, Nov 9 — French bank Societe Generale (SocGen) said today it planned a net reduction of about 640 positions in France but said there would be no forced redundancies.

The bank, which employs more than 138,000 staff in 62 countries, said the plan would concern market activities and associated functions and would help reduce costs by about €450 million (US$535 million) by 2022-2023.

French business newspaper Les Echos reported yesterday that the cuts would be mainly in the investment banking division.

The bank said that, as the banking sector’s structural challenges are exacerbated by the Covid-19 health crisis, it needed to boost the firm’s efficiency and profitability.

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SocGen said it wanted to reduce the risk profile of the credit and equity structured products business, which will concern market activities and associated functions.

It added that its securities services business and several central functions such as risk, compliance, human resources and communication were also considering organisational adjustments.

To avoid forced redundancies, the bank would encourage employee mobility or offer voluntary departures when necessary.

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The bank said on Thursday it had returned to profit in the third quarter, helped by a recovery in its markets business, after accelerating efforts to overhaul retail and markets activities following two consecutive quarterly losses. — Reuters