French bank Société Generale said on Monday it planned to close 600 branches in France in the next five years as it consolidates its network around the country.

The group said it would merge its Société Generale branches with those of its subsidiary Credit du Nord, leading to the closures and an unspecified number of job losses.

Sebastien Proto, deputy general manager of the group, told AFP there would be no forced redundancies with the group relying on retirements and “natural departures”.

Société Generale is keen to cut costs after reporting a loss in the first six months of the year of more than a billion euros.

The traditional banking sector is undergoing huge change worldwide because of falling demand for in-person services in branches, as well as competition from new so-called ‘fintech’ groups which are taking on the industry’s legacy institutions.

The traditional banking sector is undergoing huge change worldwide because of falling demand for in-person services in branches, as well as competition from new so-called ‘fintech’ groups

Société Generale said it planned to have 1,500 branches by the end of 2025 from 2,100 currently.

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