Anonymous ID: 1b9f4e Dec. 4, 2020, 8:03 p.m. No.11909511   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9565

12/2/2020 Miles Guo: CCP’s governments at all levels are preparing for the U.S. economic war; economy and banking in CCP China is collapsing

 

12/2/2020 Miles Guo: Americans and the West still use the same old thinking and logic while they evaluated the CCP’s intelligence, and they didn’t realize it’s already Meng (Jianzhu), Wang (Qishan) and Xi (Jinping)’s time; Meng Jianzhu’s illegitimate son Jho Low together with his family control 50% of the Malaysia’s GDP, its military, intelligence, oil and ects.; CCP’s governments at all levels are preparing for the U.S. economic war; economy and banking in CCP China is collapsing

 

https://gnews.org/618006/

Anonymous ID: 1b9f4e Dec. 4, 2020, 8:04 p.m. No.11909529   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Citi's Corbat Concerned Working-From-Home Could Harm 'Long-Term Productivity' As Bankers Pull 7-Day Weeks

 

As Wall Street deal flow continues to rage and top JPM executives inform M&A analysts that they won't be getting much of a Christmas break, outgoing Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat has just become the second top banker to express doubts about the shift to working from home vs. the office - at least, as far as Wall Street is concerned.

 

As bankers wonder what the future might hold as far as when they'll be returning to the office for good (if they haven't already), Bloomberg has published a wide-ranging interview with Corbat on Friday as he prepares to hand over the reins to Jane Fraser, set to become the first woman to ever lead an American megabank.

 

During the interview, Corbat addressed reports that WFH has - counterintuitively - led to a surge in productivity as the bank's workers pull long hours and 7-day weeks. He added that productivity like this could come with serious long-term drawbacks.

 

 

"People talk about the productivity that comes with working remotely,” Corbat said in a televised interview for a Bloomberg Invest Talks event that aired Friday. “Well, if I worked seven days a week, 15 to 16 hours a day and I don’t take any holidays, at least for a period of time I’m going to be more productive.”

 

Although he's concerned about the "hollowing out" of workers' skill sets, Corbat says Citi should take its time to assess how WFH impacts productivity over the long term, arguing that a final decision about WFH policies shouldn't be made in hast.

 

"I don’t want to wake up as an industry and have hollowed out our skill sets," Corbat said. "We’ll absolutely continue to accelerate the move toward digital and, where appropriate, more remote. But I certainly wouldn’t want to see us move too quickly."

 

While Citi "absolutely" prefers its workers in the office, Corbat insisted the bank wouldn't ask workers to come in if there safety might be in jeopardy.

 

"We absolutely like to have our people in when we can have them in, but we’re not going to put them at risk," Corbat said. "We’ve got to stay flexible and obviously we’re going through a bit of resurgence in parts of the world right now. We’ve been in the phase of tapering back."

 

But if Corbat's comments about the long hours Citi's bankers are pulling at home, then that would suggest that the bank has stumbled on what could be a major productivity breakthrough: how to get all of its bankers to work 1st year analyst hours.

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/citis-corbat-concerned-wfh-could-harm-long-term-productivity-bankers-pull-7-day-weeks