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EY warns UK staff over pay as it trims jobs

  • August 17, 2023
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EY has told staff in the UK to expect less generous pay rises than last year and is launching a small round of redundancies as it faces rising costs and a difficult economic outlook. 

Leaders at the Big Four firm’s British business, which employs about 18,500 people, also informed staff this week that bonus pools would be smaller than last year and would be split among a more limited group, according to people familiar with the matter. 

Bonus pools for some teams would be cut by more than half this year, the people said.

The firm will axe more than 5 per cent of its roughly 2,300-strong financial services consulting practice, with 150 jobs set to be cut in teams that advise on business transformation and risk management. 

The redundancies are far less severe than those seen at EY US, which announced in April that it would cut 3,000 jobs, or 5 per cent of its total workforce, citing “overcapacity”. 

After an initial downturn at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, EY and the wider professional services sector enjoyed bumper growth in 2021 and early 2022 and hired rapidly as companies sought advice on how to deal with challenges unleashed by the coronavirus crisis.

EY’s UK partners were paid a record average of £803,000 in the financial year ended June 2022, while bonuses for rank-and-file staff were raised by more than half to £110mn as demand for consultants soared.

The decision to offer smaller pay rises and bonus pools will affect employees. Partners, who own and run the business, are paid out of the profits.

Advisory groups have been hit by rising costs and a cooling of demand from big companies for many of their services over the past year. 

PwC told its 25,000 UK staff in June to expect smaller pay rises and bonuses if not freezes this year because of “challenging” market conditions.

In a further sign of slowing growth, EY has asked about 200 graduates due to join its consulting business next month to consider delaying their start by a year in return for a “deferral payment”. A person close to the firm stressed that putting back the start date would be optional and that there had been only “limited” uptake. 

Mandatory deferrals would affect only about 30 graduates in EY-Parthenon, the firm’s strategy division, the person added. The firm recruited almost 1,500 graduates and school-leavers in the 12 months to June 2022. 

EY’s UK boss Hywel Ball told partners in April that the firm would report “strong double-digit” revenue growth for the financial year ended June 2023. Average partner pay is normally reported in October or November alongside the firm’s annual results but is expected to be lower this year, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

In the past year, EY has been battling to cut expenses associated with hiring, travel for internal events, training and staff Christmas parties, according to people familiar with the matter. 

UK partners were told in April to prepare for fresh cost-cutting following the collapse of Project Everest, a plan to split its audit and consulting divisions globally. 

EY said in a statement that it “continues to perform strongly” and that “the vast majority of our people will receive an annual pay rise and variable bonus payment this year”. 

“EY’s UK financial services consulting practice has taken measures to align current resourcing requirements with market demand. Regrettably, a group of employees in this part of the business are now subject to a redundancy consultation process,” it added. 

Staff were told that the redundancies and remuneration decisions were not related to Project Everest.

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