NEW YORK, April 30 (Reuters) - Bank of New York Mellon ( BK )
has asked its employees to return to the office four days
a week by September 2 from a current three days, according to a
memo from the bank's executive committee seen by Reuters.
The move comes after other Wall Street banks implemented
stricter in-office mandates. JPMorgan Chase ( JPM ) prompted
staff complaints after it told workers on hybrid schedules to
come back five days a week starting in March.
"We believe that it is important that all of us spend more
time together working, leading and learning from each other,"
BNY's leaders wrote in the memo. "We're committed to maintaining
personal flexibility, and will continue to support remote work
one day a week. We have no plans to return to 5 days in office
unless circumstances were to demand otherwise."
BNY has required its 51,000 employees to work from the
office for three days a week since the first half of 2023.
"Occasional remote work can be effective, but in person we
can respond more quickly to dynamic, fast-paced financial
markets and better serve our clients," BNY executives wrote.
"Most managers are already in the office 4 days a week, and we
have seen the positive momentum this creates."