Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
ABN Amro
ABN Amro - Credit: Joeppoulssen / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
ABN Amro
financial crime
money laundering
temporary worker
layoff
collective bargaining agreement
Thursday, 20 November 2025 - 14:30

Share this article:

ABN Amro cutting all temporary workers in financial crimes department

ABN Amro is cutting all temporary workers in its financial crime investigation team. The bank is ending its collaboration with specialized secondment and staffing agencies involved in this department, the Financieele Dagblad reported.

Earlier this month, ABN Amro also announced layoffs in its sustainability department, cutting 58 permanent employees and 9 temporary workers. The bank warned that it expected to do “further optimization” in other departments.

The bank also announced in April that it was ending external hiring and not renewing temporary contracts. At the time, it spared the department that investigated signs of criminal money flows, money laundering, and terrorist funding. But it now sees room to reduce staffing there after shifting to doing some of the detecting work using technology, setting up the Detecting Financial Crime system for the purpose.

ABN Amro also reportedly decided to eliminate more temporary workers because the new collective labor agreement for the temporary employment sector will lead to higher costs for the bank. The agreement takes effect next year and stipulates equal pay for permanent employees and temporary workers. With the costs of external hiring on top of the equal pay, temporary workers will be more expensive than permanent staff.

According to the newspaper, the bank offered to take over some of the temporary workers into permanent employment, but there will be new layoffs. How many is unclear. The involved staffing agencies told FD that the announcement caught them off guard.

Last week, the trade union CNV warned that the Netherlands was on the verge of several massive layoff rounds. At least a third of the businesses with which CNV negotiates have layoffs on the table. Thousands of jobs may be at risk, especially in financial services, industry, retail, and education, CNV chairman Piet Fortuin said.

More like this

Image
Over 5 million euros in cash found in an Amsterdam home, 3 March 2022
Cash in construction, Fraud in healthcare among top financial crime trends of 2023
Image
Thousands of euros found in a money laundering investigation focused on a Surinamese speciality shop in Rotterdam. 22 May 2026
Rotterdam pair caught laundering cash from Surinamese takeaway, Amsterdam travel office
Image
Construction workers in Rotterdam
Economic concerns at companies slowing wage increases
Image
Money laundering concept
Dutch banks need better money laundering checks and more vigilence says central bank
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Lawmaker leaves Tweede Kamer for Amsterdam alderman role after mayoral bid disclosure
  • Tata Steel drops new Sustainability Chief Pols over pro-apartheid past in South Africa
  • Video: Arson suspected after fire destroys Wijdenes restaurant; Racist text on walls
  • Stop automatically giving babies the father’s surname: Majority of MP’s
  • Eurostar trains to, from Netherlands increasingly popular; 4 million passengers in 2025

Top stories

  • Tata Steel drops new Sustainability Chief Pols over pro-apartheid past in South Africa
  • Waiting times of a year or longer at some Dutch hospitals as doctor shortage grows
  • Video: One killed, two hurt in stabbing at Heerhugowaard business
  • High energy prices push Dutch inflation to 3.5% in May
  • Marketing firm behind iconic “I Amsterdam” campaign files for bankruptcy

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content