Goldman Sachs Group is planning to bring back its US workers to the office from next month as daily Covid-19 cases continue to decline.
In an internal memo, Goldman CEO David Solomon asked its workers in the US to be prepared to return to their workplace by 14 June. The message was for the employees who are yet to resume work from office.
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The memo was also co-signed by COO John Waldron and CFO Stephen Scherr.
The executives were quoted by CNBC as saying in the message: “While each community is at a different stage of managing through the pandemic, we continue to be encouraged by the rollout of vaccines in a number of jurisdictions, as well as by the effectiveness of the health and safety protocols we have put in place across Goldman Sachs campuses to protect our people.
“We know from experience that our culture of collaboration, innovation and apprenticeship thrives when our people come together, and we look forward to having more of our colleagues back in the office so that they can experience that once again on a regular basis.”
Separately, Reuters reported that the investment bank also intends to call its UK-based staff to offices by mid-July.
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By GlobalDataGoldman Sachs has around 40,000 employees around the world.
Last month, the firm reported net revenue of $17.7bn and net earnings of $6.84bn in the first quarter of this year. Both the figures represent quarterly record for the firm.
