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Merrill Lynch said on Thursday it would cut 4,000 jobs after more than $6 billion (3.78 billion) fresh write-downs pushed it to a loss for the first quarter.
Chief Executive John Thain also cautioned that things were unlikely to improve much in the next couple of quarters.
The New York-based firm posted negative revenue in its fixed-income trading business and a 40 percent slump in investment banking fees. This caused total revenue to slip 69 percent to $2.93 billion (1.85 billion) from $9.6 billion a year earlier.
Results missed Wall Street projections for a loss of $1.99 per share on $3.7 billion (2.33 billion) of revenue, according to analysts polled by Thomson Financial.
Merrill Lynch, the third-largest
Despite the turbulence, Thain said the company has $82 billion of excess liquidity to help protect against choppy market conditions.
"This was about as difficult a quarter as I've seen in my 30 years on Wall Street," Thain told analysts during a conference call. "We are planning for a slower and more difficult next couple of months and probably next couple of quarters, but are also hopeful for our full year 2008 results."
After joining Merrill four months ago, Thain pledged to clean up the brokerage's balance sheet and take steps to make it more profitable. He already secured more than $12 billion (7.56 billion) worth of new capital, and now has unveiled a plan to trim the company’s ranks.
Merrill said it will record a restructuring charge of $350 million (220.51 million) in the current quarter for the layoffs, which will reduce its headcount by 10 percent in areas outside of financial advisers and investment associates. The entire company has about 63,000 employees globally.
During the first quarter, Merrill Lynch said it suffered a $1.5 billion (0.95 billion) write-down linked to asset-backed securities, and a $3 billion (1.89 billion) write-down tied to the value of bond insurance contracts. The brokerage also lowered the value of leveraged loans by $925 million (582.79 million).