Wall Street's workforce is shrinking.
Front-office headcount at investment banks across the Street has dropped 21% over the past five years, according to the data-analytics firm Coalition.
Total headcount in the first quarter of 2016 was down 2% from the same period a year ago.
Fixed-income, currencies, and commodities — or FICC — trading businesses saw the biggest staffing declines in the first quarter, dropping 5% to 18,300 people from 19,200 last year.
Equities-trading headcount dropped 1% to 18,800 people in Q1, down from 19,000 the year before, while investment-banking headcount came in at 17,700, down 1% from 17,900 in the year-ago quarter.
Fixed income has also seen the largest headcount decline over the longer term. It's down 32% over the past five years, while equities headcount is down 12% and investment-banking headcount is down 14% over the same period.
Revenues in the fixed-income division were down 28% year-on-year in the first quarter, and down 49% over the five-year period.
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