JPMorgan Chase tells managers to send up to half of NY metro employees to work from home in shifts

Finance

People pass a sign for JPMorgan Chase at it’s headquarters in Manhattan, New York City.

Spencer Platt | Getty Images

JPMorgan Chase on Thursday told managers to implement a plan to have employees based in offices in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Jersey City to start working from home in shifts beginning on Friday.

“We are asking our managers to arrange for no fewer than 25% and no greater than 50% of their team members who can effectively work from home, to begin doing so by the end of this week,” according to a memo obtained by CNBC, which was sent to staff Thursday morning.

The move is likely to be followed widely be other large New York-area employers: JPMorgan said it was following the request of Gov. Andrew Cuomo to reduce the density of workers at offices and taking mass transit. Still, sending wide swaths of employees home, as tech giants like Google and Amazon have done, signals an escalation in tactics as the coronavirus continues to spread.

JPMorgan said workers would be split up into two or more groups, and that the first stay-at-home shift would last through next Friday. Then, that group returns to the office while others work remotely, a weekly rotation that will be in place “until further notice,” the New York-based firm said. Bloomberg reported earlier that bank was sending workers home.

The new mandate excludes traders and bank branch employees, who can’t easily work from home. JPMorgan and other banks, including Morgan Stanley and Citigroup, have sent traders to backup sites in New Jersey and Brooklyn starting this week. That’s because highly-regulated trading activities require robust internet connections and specialized work stations only available in offices.   

Subscribe to CNBC PRO for exclusive insights and analysis, and live business day programming from around the world.

Articles You May Like

Caitlin Clark joins NWSL ownership group bidding to bring soccer team to Cincinnati
73% of workers worry Social Security won’t be able to pay retirement benefits. Here’s what advisors say
How the world’s 431 women billionaires make, spend and give away their fortunes
California Ended Its Medicaid Long-Term Care Asset Test. What Happened?
‘I have no money’: Thousands of Americans see their savings vanish in Synapse fintech crisis

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *