Automation and new technology are replacing thousands of workers at banks and asset managers around the world, just as consolidation -- including Deutsche Bank AG’s proposed merger with Commerzbank AG -- puts thousands more jobs at risk.

The pressure on headcount follows bouts of volatility that roiled global markets late last year, and investors’ growing preference for passive, low-fee funds that require far fewer workers at asset-management firms. On top of that, financial companies with operations in the U.K. could slow their hiring ahead of the country’s anticipated exit from the European Union.

Traders may be on high alert for cutbacks after a tough first three months of 2019, which usually marks investment banks’ best quarter of the year. UBS Group AG Chief Executive Officer Sergio Ermotti last week called it “one of the worst” first-quarter environments in recent history. The inversion of parts of the U.S. yield curve, considered a harbinger of recession, is adding more dark clouds.

Still, shrinking staff is an annual tradition for the biggest securities firms, which trim personnel in some areas to expand in others or dismiss under-performers to make way for an incoming class of junior bankers. The yearly sweeps don’t necessarily signal plans to shrink businesses.

In 2018, the 12 largest global investment banks cut front-office headcount for at least the fifth straight year, industry data firm Coalition Development Ltd. said in a report last month.

Here’s a list of finance firms’ job cuts since Jan. 1:

This article was provided by Bloomberg News.