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  • Jefferies COVID case outbreak casts pall over Wall St's office return

    COVID file photo COVID

    Investment bank Jefferies Financial Group on Wednesday asked staff to work from home again due to a spate of COVID-19 cases, raising questions about banks' efforts to return to business as usual.

    U.S. banks have been more assertive than other industries in encouraging employees back to the office, but those plans have come under renewed scrutiny due to the rapid spread of the Omicron variant.

    Jefferies said it was also cancelling client parties and virtually all travel. The firm's disclosure prompted speculation about whether other banks will follow suit.

    According to report Brian Marks said, "Those financial institutions and Wall Street firms that believed there will be an automatic return to work and were pushing for that are going to reexamine their current return to work status especially given employees’ concerns."

    Jefferies, with its headquarters in midtown Manhattan, had called its staff back to offices in October. The bank has felt the pandemic's impact acutely, as its Chief Financial Officer Peg Broadbent died due to coronavirus complications in March 2020.

    "Our priority now is to best protect every one of you and your families," wrote Chief Executive Richard Handler in a memo seen by Reuters. "Effective today, we are cancelling all social events and entertainment until January 3rd."

    Jefferies added in the memo that while it was "beyond eager for all of our people to be back in our offices...When you can, we ask that you work from home."

    The firm has had more than 40 new COVID-19 cases this month including 10 on Tuesday, the memo said, adding only very few cases required hospitalization. Handler added that Jefferies was re-imposing a mask mandate in all offices, regardless of vaccination status.

    Jefferies, which had seen attendance average as high as 60% many days globally in recent weeks, said it will require booster shots by Jan. 31.

    The investment bank, which has 4,500 employees worldwide, also has offices in Asia and Europe. More than 95% of Jefferies staff are now vaccinated, and all visitors to Jefferies' offices must be fully vaccinated, Handler said in the memo.

    Jefferies did not say where the staff with COVID worked.

    Shares in the bank closed down 2.3%. New York set a vaccine requirement for workers at all private companies as the highly transmissible Omicron variant pushes into more U.S. states. The New York City Mayor's office and New York Department of Financial Services did not respond to requests for comment on the Jefferies cases.

    Most major U.S. banks have had staff working in offices since the summer. Senior bankers such as Goldman Sachs Chief Executive David Solomon and Morgan Stanley Chief Executive James Gorman have spoken of the benefits of in-person interaction, particularly for younger employees.

    Goldman Sachs (GS.N), Morgan Stanley (MS.N) and JPMorgan (JPM.N) have had most workers back at offices on a rotational basis since the summer.