British banking giant HSBC fired a group of investment banks on a set day to learn the size of the bonus and refused to make annual payments, according to the report.
The London-based lender reported that it was handed over to financial operators and Hong Kong last month after it announced it had focused on M&A and capital market jobs in Asia and the Middle East.
But the ruthless boss told the canned banker it would be launched without a stairwell in 2024, a source told FT.
HSBC Insider said he was hoping to lose work this year, but that fired workers, below the Vice President, were hoping to get some of the bonuses given their performance over the past year.
“That's very different from HSBC,” one of the affected people told the UK financial newspaper strolling around Trump, saying the bank had a “reputation for caring for it.”
There was no details as to how many bankers were let go.
A spokesman for HSBC declined to comment.
“A good employer will pay a bonus prolator during the hours he works per year, but in some cases it isn't,” Tanbil Rahman, an attorney for the law firm's Philippatos, told the post.
HSBC's bitter British rival, Barclays, made a similar move to avoid huge payments, as previously reported.
According to regulatory filings, HSBC's bonus cash pool reached $3.8 billion in 2024, compared to $3.77 billion.
Last May, HSBC shareholders supported a resolution to raise the bonus cap for top UK bankers after the UK had x policies restricting payments inherited from the European Union.
Investment banks are a small part of HSBC's business model and are dominated by commercial and retail activities.
Lebanese-born CEO Georges Elhedery, who rakes $6.8 million last year, has a major cost-cutting plan across HSBC, aiming to earn $1.5 billion in annual savings by the end of 2026.
According to the bank's latest financial report, if he can raise HSBC's share price by 50%, he could earn up to $19.2 million this year.
Goldman Sachs Alam's strategy also focuses on improving returns by attracting attention in Asia, where banks are gaining a large portion of their profits.
Elhedery's potentially eye-opening wage packet means he'll make far more than his predecessor, Noel Quinn.

