UPDATE 1-Comerica barely breaks even, cutting jobs

Thu Jan 22, 2009 7:17am EST

* Bank to cut 5 percent of jobs

* Freezing salaries for higher-paid workers

* Credit losses increase

NEW YORK, Jan 22 (Reuters) - Comerica Inc (CMA.N), a large U.S. regional bank, on Thursday said it barely broke even in the fourth quarter, plans to cut 5 percent of its workforce by the end of March and will freeze salaries for higher-paid employees.

Net income for shareholders of the Dallas-based lender fell to $3 million, or 2 cents per share, from $119 million, or 79 cents, a year earlier, Comerica said. Excluding preferred stock dividends, profit fell 81 percent to $20 million.

Results included a 12 cents-per-share charge for severance-related costs, and a 5 cents-per-share benefit tied to a settlement over the sale of auction-rate securities.

Analysts on average expected profit of 25 cents per share excluding items, according to Reuters Estimates.

Comerica said it expects to eliminate roughly 509 jobs this quarter, on top of nearly 600 cuts since the end of 2007.

It is also freezing salaries in 2009 for the top 20 percent of its workforce. Comerica also plans to slow branch growth.

"Mounting job losses and an economy headed deeper into recession have dampened business and consumer confidence," Chief Executive Ralph Babb said in a statement. "We are focused on controlling expenses."

Comerica set aside $192 million for credit losses, up from $108 million a year earlier. Net charge-offs more than doubled to $133 million.

The bank received $2.3 billion from the government's $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program.

Shares of Comerica closed Wednesday at $13.86 on the New York Stock Exchange. Through Wednesday, the shares had fallen 63 percent in the last year, compared with a 64 percent decline in the KBW Bank Index .BKX. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel, editing by Maureen Bavdek)

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