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Terra Firma MDs land new senior jobs after investment staff exodus

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Terra Firma, the UK private equity group with Guy Hands at the epicentre, has been losing senior investment staff, many of who departed the firm after less than 18 months. Now, they’ve been landing new roles.

Peter Miholich, who joined Terra Firma in September 2015 as a managing director on its support capital fund and departed in November last year, has just arrived at £8bn PE firm HgCapital as a senior investment professional on its mid-market fund. Hg has around 130 employees across offices in the UK and Germany.

Miholich joined Terra Firma from Nomura, where he led its principal credit business in Europe for 18 months. He also spent more than two years as global head of strategic equity at Royal Bank of Scotland, overseeing a team of 25 equity professionals and 15 structurers and a structured lending portfolio of $5bn. RBS closed the business in 2012.

Miholich was one of a number of senior investment professionals to depart Terra Firma after a relatively short tenure over the past 18 months. This year, managing directors Alex Williams, Michele Russo and Jyrki Lee Korhonen – all of whom joined in 2016 – all departed over the summer.

Korhonen, who was responsible for the Nordic region at Terra Firma, has just landed at DH Private Equity Partners. He joined last week as a partner focused on Nordic investments, based in London.

Korhonen joined Terra Firma in April 2016 from Triton Partners, where he was a partner focused on Nordic investments, but left in May. Before this, he worked in equity research at J.P. Morgan.

Terra Firma has a long-established graduate programme, which attracts 1,500 applications for six places and offers successful applications a deposit of 40% on a house in London if they stay for five years. However, it has been losing a high number of senior investment professionals over the past 18 months.

As well as these four departures, Tavra Banga, a former Citi banker who joined Terra Firma in 2007, left in January, while longstanding MD Julie Williamson left at the tail end of last year. Insiders told us previously that there are now comparatively few senior investment professionals left.

Have a tip, story or comment? Contact: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Photo: Getty Images

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The hot new start-up poaching banks’ technologists doesn’t do “quirky”

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Typical. Just as J.P. Morgan tries to get down with the ‘techies’ with new offices where developers can draw on furniture and strum on acoustic guitars, engineers are quitting banks for a popular new tech firm that seems, well, normal.

The firm in question is Privitar, a London-based fintech company that specializes in developing privacy engineering software. Privitar was founded in 2014 but received $16m in funding last July.  It’s now on the lookout for developers, and history suggests it’s partial to hiring them from banks.

Privitar’s most recent recruit is Henry Jones, a former associate on the securities compliance technology team at Goldman Sachs. Jones joined Privitar this month as an engineer. He’s the latest in a long line of ex-bank recruits to the firm, including: Aengus Rooney, who joined in October after 21 months at another start-up, preceded by five years at Barclays; Jo-anne Tay, who joined in May after 15 months at another start-up, preceded by two and a half years at Goldman and three years at Citi; and Vladimir Eatwell and Kieron Guinamard, who joined from J.P. Morgan and Goldman respectively in 2016.

While banks embellish themselves with all the latest gimmicks in their attempt to lure technologists, Privitar’s appeal appears to lie elsewhere. The firm’s website makes no mention of meditation rooms and in-house music-making facilities. Instead, it offers “fruit,” a “cycle to work scheme”, free phones, “top notch computers,” and 30 days’ holiday.  “On Friday, we try to finish a bit early to get together over a drink and share updates and stories,” it explains. So far, so conservative.

Privitar hasn’t filed any accounts, so its P&L remains a mystery. However, the company’s appeal to developers is likely more to do with product than profit. Ex-bank engineers at the firm say they’re working on big data and machine learning in the privacy space. Coupled with the lack of bureaucracy at a small firm, this is clearly considered more meaningful than working on compliance technology at a big bank.

Privitar’s success suggests banks might want to reconsider their approach. As the fintech sector matures, office gimmickry is likely to be replaced by the more middle-aged pursuit of good products and steady growth. Banks, meanwhile, appear to be moving in a more infantile direction; drawable furniture and jamming-rooms are all very nice, but they’re not going to persuade the top engineers to hang around.

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The 10 most impressive new managing directors at Goldman Sachs

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Last week. Goldman Sachs promoted its largest ever number of managing directors: 509 people were elevated to the level below partner. All of them are special, but some – by virtue of the speed of their promotion and the business areas they work in – seem a little more special than others.

We’ve suggested 10 of the most interesting and impressive new Goldman  managing directors below. You’ll notice that most of them come from trading, technology and strats – the fastest routes to the top at GS.  By comparison, if you want to make managing director in the investment banking division, you’ll typically need to work your way up for at least 11 years.

1. Jesse Cohen, equities program trading strat, New York

Jesse Cohen is the wunderkind of this year’s Goldman Sachs managing director class. He completed a bachelor’s degree in computer science at Harvard University in 2010, making him aged around 28 now.

Cohen joined Goldman in 2011 after completing an MPhil in computational biology at Cambridge University. He’s therefore been promoted to MD in only six years – around the time you’d typically make senior associate in the investment banking division (IBD).

Cohen works on Goldman’s strats team and is aligned to the program trading business, which the firm is seeking to expand.

2. Moran (Baldar) Forman, index derivatives trading, New York

Moran Forman is one of the 122 women promoted to managing director at Goldman Sachs this year.

Like Cohen she’s young: she graduated from Columbia in 2009 with a bachelors in economics, and is aged just 29.

Forman joined J.P. Morgan after university, where she distinguished herself on the index derivatives trading desk. She joined Goldman four years later, in 2012. Forman was named “one to watch” under 30 by Forbes in 2015.

3. Pramod Vaidyanathan, portfolio manager and trader in the investment management division. New York

In the event that the Volcker Rule is repealed and banks can go back to prop trading, Vaidyanathan will be a man to watch.

A graduate in engineering and mathematics, Vaidyanathan began his career in risk management at Citi. After a year and a half he moved into equity derivatives trading, where he became one of Citi’s leading equity derivatives traders, before moving to Goldman in August 2015.

4. Michael Fargher, head of GBP swaps trading, London 

Like Vaidyanathan and 33% of the other MDs on this year’s list, Fargher is not a Goldman lifer. He only joined the firm in 2013, after a year at hedge fund Millennium Partners. Four years later, he’s an MD.

Fargher’s route to the top at Goldman isn’t just about this four year sprint, however. – He worked for Goldman for two years between 2009 and 2011 before leaving to complete a double Masters in economics and development studies at Oxford University.

5. Richard Chambers, rates trader, New York

Chambers is another star trader who joined Goldman only recently.

A graduate of the National University of Ireland at Galway in 2005, Chambers completed a Masters in Finance qualification at the UK’s Warwick Business School in 2006.

He then spent nearly seven years as a rates trader at BNP Paribas in London before joining BlueCrest Capital Management and then Goldman in New York in 2015.

6. Erkko Etula, strategic quantitative asset allocation, New York

If you’re looking for a view on rising interest rates and market movements, Etula is the person to get it from.

Etula graduated from Harvard with a PhD in economics in 2009. He briefly became an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York before joining Goldman in 2010. At GS he’s part of the investment strategy group and responsible for research into quantitative asset allocation. Until 2016, Etula was also an adjunct professor at the NYU Stern School of Business, where he taught monetary policy and banking.

7. Samuel Krasnik, head of FAST technology for the fixed income, currencies and commodities division, New York 

The FAST team is one of the most interesting technology teams at Goldman Sachs. A hybrid between data analytics and technology, FAST stands for Franchise Analytics, Strategy & Technology. FAST sits within the Strats Group and is about developing analytics into tools that can be used by Goldman’s fixed income currency and commodities (FICC) traders and salespeople to deliver insights and build decisions.

Krasnik has a bachelors in computer science from Cornell University. He started his banking career on shaky ground at Bear Stearns in 2008, before moving to J.P. Morgan and then on to Goldman Sachs in 2009.

8. Scott Weinstein, Marquee Engineering, New York

Like Krasnik, Weinstein is working on one of Goldman’s key technology programs. Marquee is Goldman’s move to make its previously proprietary SecDB risk and pricing system directly accessible to clients and Weinstein is a key player.

He’s a frequent contributor to Goldman’s StackOverflow page and joined the firm in 2013 after working for Citi and Lab49, a technology consulting company which specializes in capital markets. 

9. Piotr Zurawski, head of a team of systematic trading strategists, London 

As systematic trading becomes more important at Goldman, Piotr was one of several systematic traders promoted in the last MD round (others included Jason D’Silva and Philip Coreau).

Piotr graduated from the London School of Economics in 2011 with a PhD in Financial Economics. He then joined the National Bank of Poland in Warsaw before moving to J.P. Morgan in London. At Goldman, he heads a team of systematic traders who manage vanilla and exotic derivative risks written GS Systematic Trading Strategies.

10. Ketan Vyas, strategist, New York

With the front office strats team emerging as one of the fastest routes to become an MD at Goldman Sachs, Vyas is a poster-boy for the new path to the top.

Vyas graduated with a DPhil in Physics from the California Institute of Technology in 2010. He joined Goldman in 2010 and has therefore made MD in just seven years.

Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

Bear with us if you leave a comment at the bottom of this article: all our comments are moderated by actual human beings! Sometimes these humans might be asleep, or away from their desks, so it may take a while for your comment to appear. Eventually it will – unless it’s offensive or libelous (in which case it won’t.)

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Bank of America and Goldman Sachs are now chasing the same bankers

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If you live in the UK, you may be familiar with the phrase, “a local shop for local people,” from the surreal BBC comedy series, The League of Gentleman. If you live in the U.S., you may want to familiarize themselves with the phrase (if not the program): it’s the latest big idea, applied in an investment banking context.

Following yesterday’s revelation that Goldman Sachs is looking for bankers to deal with mid-market clients in “secondary” North American cities like Atlanta, Dallas, Seattle and Toronto, Bank of America said today that it’s doing much the same.

In a presentation during BofA’s Future of Financials Conference, Tom Montag, BofA’s chief operating officer, said the bank wants “local people with local knowledge” to serve local clients in expanding investment banking teams in the likes of Seattle and Denver.

“We think there is growth there,” said Montag, “Growth in the number of products, particularly investment banking products that we can offer middle markets clients across the country.”

This is bad news for Goldman Sachs, which will clearly have competition for billions of extra mid-market revenues from Bank of America (which already has local relationships thanks to its corporate lending teams). It’s good news, however, for all those local bankers with local knowledge, who will seemingly be at the front of the hiring queue in 2018.

BofA and Goldman’s mid-market aspirations appear to apply mostly to the U.S.. However, Montag suggested that Brexit will inspire banks to take a more local approach in Europe too. “After Brexit, we think we will be more local than we have been before in Europe and competing more with European banks than in the past,” he said. He added that BofA has been “winning wars” and seizing market share from European banks (ie. Deutsche) in areas like prime brokerage, where its balances are up 40% in the past 18 months.

Marty Chavez, Goldman’s CFO, presented at the conference after Montag. Chavez reiterated Goldman’s plan to increase revenues by $5bn, as outlined by COO Harvey Schwartz last month.  Chavez emphasized Goldman’s intention of penetrating new markets where clients don’t see GS as a core “liquidity provider” and confirmed that Goldman intends to increase its interaction with equities quant funds. He also updated figures underlining Goldman’s strategy of moving jobs out of London, New York and Hong Kong and into Bangalore and Warsaw. If you want to get hired at GS in 2018, it will help not to be in one of the world’s financial capitals.

Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

Bear with us if you leave a comment at the bottom of this article: all our comments are moderated by actual human beings! Sometimes these humans might be asleep, or away from their desks, so it may take a while for your comment to appear. Eventually it will – unless it’s offensive or libelous (in which case it won’t.)

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Wall Street banks offering $40k relocation packages, bigger bonuses for quants

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Working in quantitative risk pays – investment banks in the U.S. are offering bigger bonuses and relocation packages of up to $40k to lock down the best PhD candidates on Wall Street.

Investment banks are now offering salaries of $90-125k to PhDs fresh out of university in quant risk, according to new figures from recruiters Selby Jennings, and bonuses are up to 35% in high-paying U.S.-headquartered investment banks.

“One of the main points risk individuals should realize is that the industry will start to shift into a format of fixed salary bands, similar to how IBD operates,” says Kareem Bakr, a director at Selby Jennings. “We anticipate bonuses and performance buckets to become a much larger part of compensation packages and internal rankings.”

This is a big change. Between 2012 and 2016, banks went heavy on quant risk managers’ base salaries while offering smaller bonuses. However, the survey results indicate a return in flatter base pay and more competitive bonus structures that incorporate both cash and stock.

Risk candidates are also asking for – and often receiving – relocation and sign-on bonuses. Selby Jennings reports that it is highly rare to see organizations not provide a comprehensive relocation package ranging from $5k to $40k.

“The most consistent trend we have seen is that the floor for starting salaries is rising. Entry-level candidates are receiving very well-rounded compensation packages made up of sign-on bonuses, deferred bonuses and hefty relocation assistance when needed,” he says.

Risk management professionals’ base salaries at Canadian and Japanese banks continue to lag peers at U.S. banks and even a few European banks that are ponying up to attract senior talent.

The new rule preventing New York-based hiring managers from asking candidates about their compensation is already having an impact. Some candidates have already started to leverage withholding their compensation, which has been a double-edged sword for banks. For example, one candidate that Selby Jennings worked with did not disclose their previous compensation until they accepted the new offer. This tactic ultimately resulted in a 70% increase in total pay.

“Some have taken a stance on generally low balling the offer and negotiating from there, while other institutions are going to swing for the fences and try to beat out the competition with their initial offer,” Bakr says.

The most challenging level to for banks to recruit is the VP-level talent pool, typically someone with between five and eight years of experience, per Selby Jennings.



Photo credit: SIphotography/GettyImages
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Standard Chartered has just hired a new managing director from DBS in Singapore

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Standard Chartered has continued its senior technology hiring drive in Singapore by recruiting veteran banking technologist Paul Beresford from DBS.

Beresford has joined Stan Chart as a Singapore-based managing director and global head of retail products technology channels, statements and operations. He is responsible for platforms such as “channels, ATM, voice and virtual, chat, contact centre, statements and operations”, according to his public profile.

Beresford was head of consumer banking group digital technology at DBS. He joined the Singaporean firm in February last year and oversaw local and regional technology across mobile, public web, internet banking, payments, and sales-force mobility.

Prior to DBS, Beresford spent seven and a half years at ANZ, latterly as head of delivery for digital and content. He has also worked for IBM Global Business Services in the UK (2004 to 2008) and at two insurance firms in his native Australia.

This is not the only major tech hire that Stan Chart has made in Singapore in recent months. As we reported at the time, it recruited Pedro Sousa Cardoso from Emirates NBD in August as global head of digital commerce.

Stan Chart has also taken tech talent from DBS this year. In June, it hired George Harrak, the former head of technology delivery for DBS’ digital bank, as global head of technology programmes and solutions for private banking and wealth.

Singapore’s largest five banking employers – Citi, DBS, OCBC, Stan Chart and UOB – are all stepping up their tech recruitment, which often means poaching from each other.

Last month UOB recruited Christopher Wee from Stan Chart to help led digital partnerships for group wholesale banking, while Ram Jayaraman moved from Citi to DBS as head of digital technology transformation.

It’s not just senior musical chairs in the sector. OCBC is expanding its digital banking teams in Singapore and is hiring people from outside of finance to overcome local talent shortages, Pranav Seth, head of e-business, told us in September month.


Image credit:  Ingolf Hatz, Getty

I’m still a finance student, but I’ve launched a Hong Kong blockchain start-up

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Most fintech entrepreneurs decide to go it alone only after clocking up several years in big banks; Hung Lok Bun chose a more rapid path. He’s launched a blockchain company, learned from his initial mistakes, and refocused his firm into a new field…and he’s done all that while still a student.

Hung, who’s in his final year of an undergraduate finance degree, teamed up with three other students at the City University of Hong Kong in 2016 to form B-route, a blockchain platform that allows customers to buy or resell e-tickets and create their own events.

“I became interested in blockchain by accident,” says Hung. “A couple of years ago I was working at a DBS conference to earn some extra money. Because the room wasn’t full, they allowed me to sit in on the presentations, which happened to be about blockchain. From that point onwards, I knew it was the area I wanted to work in.”

Last year Hung and his classmates came up with the idea for B-route and entered the Cyberport University Partnership Programme, a Hong Kong government sponsored fintech competition.

After a one-week “entrepreneurship boot camp” at Stanford University in California, where his and rival student teams honed their pitching and fundraising skills, they presented their business plan to the Cyberport judges back in Hong Kong.

B-route was chosen as one of the winning teams. It received HK$100k (US$13k) in seed funding and was registered as a company. Hung, meanwhile, had gone from having a passion for blockchain to co-founding a fintech start-up.

“After we won, we used the money for product development and hardware, and were able to build a prototype,” says Hung. “We got the company off the ground because we had a complimentary combination of finance and technology skills – two of my partners were studying engineering and the other one was majoring in economics.”

Then came the harder part. “We took the prototype out to show potential clients, but a lot of the feedback was ‘your team is just students, how do we know you can deliver? We underestimated how difficult it would be,” says Hung.

Hung learned that success as a start-up in Hong Kong depends on your Guanxi as well as your technical and business prowess. “In Asia, it can be hard for an outsider to enter and disrupt a market. All the established platforms have a lot of personal connections behind them that you don’t have.”

Still, Hung and his fellow students have not turned their backs on fintech. They are currently teaming up with some experienced Hong Kong finance professionals – including a developer working for a hedge fund and a compliance manager at an investment bank – to remodel their company into a cryptocurrency platform.

“I can’t name their names or reveal our idea, because we’re just in the initial stage of creating a prototype. But it will be an original take on cryptocurrency,” says Hung.

Hung has also recently landed a two-days-a-week job as a fintech project assistant at Bank of East Asia. On other days, his college classes typically end at 6pm. “The team and I then spend time on the prototype, and we also have business meetings on Sunday mornings. I’m very busy and tired almost all the time, but if you want to succeed in fintech, you have to be constantly thinking of new ideas – even if you’re just walking down the street.”

While Hung would ideally like to begin his career at a bank after graduating, he is prepared to commit to the start-up full time. “All of the people involved share a common thought: if the cryptocurrency business goes well, we will quit our jobs.”

Morning Coffee: The toughest place to be a hot young thing in finance. Marty Chavez tackles banker bashing

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Every year, Forbes produces its 30 under 30 list for the financial sector, and has high-achieving, competitive 20-somethings across Wall Street and the City grinding their teeth with envy. 2015 was the year fintech broke, so the 2016 ranking was dominated by people who had unleashed a hot new start-up backed by hundreds of millions in venture capital backing.

There’s a fair share of those in the 2018 list that’s just been unveiled, like 29-year-old Ryan Williams, founder of Jack Ma-backed real estate fintech firm Cadre, or college drop out Quinten Farmer, 27, co founder of budget-balancing app, Even, which has received funding by Peter Thiel. But it’s more balanced. Now, if you’re an analyst or portfolio manager at a top hedge fund before hitting 30, or are running a trading desk at a large investment bank, then Forbes has probably found you. Take 29-year-old Maria Egee, who is building a credit default swaps desk at Bank of America Merrill Lynch or Anne Victoir Auriault, also 29, a VP senior trader on Goldman’s index arbitrage strategies or Jonathan Fife, who runs a mortgage bond portfolio at hedge fund Blue Mountain Capital Management.

The thing is, though, that trading is a young person’s game. Some think that 30 is the time when most people burn out on the trading floor and looking for something else, while banks’ tendency to ‘juniorise’ their trading desks – replacing expensive senior employees with cheaper juniors – means that 20-somethings should be dominating the trading floor.

It’s much harder to impress in M&A, largely because those working on the big deals are usually older, senior bankers. There’s a distinct dearth of investment bankers on Forbes’ list, therefore. Lalit Gurnani is one, but at 28 he’s still an associate working at Goldman Sachs in San Francisco. He was, however, on a lead role in some of the hottest tech IPOs including the flotation of cloud communication firm Twilio and real estate app Redfin, which IPOed earlier this year.

Then there’s 26-year-old Tom Dadon, head of mergers and acquisitions at Kraft Heinz. A mere pup in investment banking terms, Dadon had barely two years of industry experience – first at boutique Centerview Partners and then PE firm 3G Capital in New York – before moving to Kraft Heinz as head of North America budget and business planning. He was promoted to his current role in 2016 (three years into his career) and oversaw the firm’s unsuccessful $143bn bid for Unilever this year.

Separately, remember banker bashing? God, it was just so noughties, right? Marty Chavez, the former chief information officer turned chief financial officer at Goldman Sachs, told the New York Times that in 2010 there was a very simple equation in people’s minds: “Technology in San Francisco, good. Finance in New York, evil.”

Seven years’ ago during a Thanksgiving dinner, a guest asked Chavez “Marty, how can you work for that company? How do you look at yourself in the mirror?” Chavez decided to confront what he saw as an ill-informed stereotype head on.  “What exactly do you mean?” he asked. “Well, Lehman,” referring its 2008 bankruptcy. “Yes, what about Lehman?” Chavez replied. “I don’t work at Lehman.”

“I took away from that, ‘Oh, it was just in the zeitgeist at the time,’” Chavez said. Now, in good news for bankers everywhere, Chavez says people have bigger fish to fry. “Nobody’s too interested in Goldman Sachs,” he said. “They’re much more interested in the Russian hacking of the election and all their other mishegas. So times change.”

Meanwhile: 

Citigroup has just invested $20m in fintech start-up Behavox, which uses AI to monitor staff (Financial Times)

Odey: The “fault lines of the next financial crisis are clearly visible to those who care to look” (Financial News)

Bankers can move across Europe freely after Brexit, says Brexit secretary David Davis (Financial Times)

Banks are suddenly more optimistic about Brexit (Bloomberg)

“It is the name of the game if we front-run orders. Sometimes you win sometimes you lose. It’s up to us to define the front run rules.” (Dealbreaker)

Evercore has hired Paul Aaron, a former Goldman Sachs partner, as a senior managing director in its advisory practice (Financial News)

Jefferies has been making some big hires (Financial News)

The race for the first game-changing quantum computer (New York Times)

Millennials: “Not what one would call a lucky generation” (Bloomberg)

They should give up sandwiches, holidays and nights out if they want to afford a house (Evening Standard)

Have a tip, story or comment? Contact: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Photo: Getty Images

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I left my banking job in London for something much better in Milan

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20 months ago, I left London. After 10 months on the Deutsche Bank ETF desk, I decided to come back and work in Milan. I’m Italian – I never planned to stay in London, but I’d expected to stay there longer than I did…

I came to Milan for a job – for the kind of amazing opportunity you don’t get when you’re in London with 10 months’ experience on the Deutsche ETF desk. I was invited to help set up an Italian ETF operation by brokerage firm Kepler Chevreux.

I’m an ETF sales trader. My team has the kind of entrepreneurial approach you find in a start-up. It’s nothing like working for a large structured bank in the City: the approach is much freer, far less siloed – we work across different functions and are rewarded on the basis of the business we bring in. There’s much less bureaucracy. Far less politics.

Italy’s market structure is also very different to the market in London. Here, there’s a large number of small financial institutions. In London, you’re chasing tier one clients. In Italy, you’re also chasing much smaller clients that large London banks might overlook: here, I work with clients from tier one to tier four. You need to be on the ground and to really understand the market and tailor your service to the client in front of you, no matter how small. The role is much more personalized.

I still travel a lot, and that can be tiring, but I travel within Italy. In London, you spend your time getting on planes and traveling to other European financial centres. Here, I’m more likely to get on a train to Rome or Naples. It’s tiring. It’s fun. I’m getting to meet people across my home country and am building valuable relationships for the future. This wouldn’t have been possible if I’d stayed in the U.K.

Milan operates at a different pace to London. Life is less crazy here; Milan sometimes sleeps, London often does not. Milan is a smaller city and the finance sector here is a lot smaller than in London – your network here will always be smaller, but you’ll know the people in it very well. I have no regrets about coming back: it’s given my career a big boost. Maybe you should try it too?

Jacopo D’Elisiis is an ETF sales trader working in Milan


Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com
Bear with us if you leave a comment at the bottom of this article: all our comments are moderated by actual human beings! Sometimes these humans might be asleep, or away from their desks, so it may take a while for your comment to appear. Eventually it will – unless it’s offensive or libelous (in which case it won’t.)

Photo credit: Partiamo già per le ferie? – We leave on vacation already? by Lorenzoclick is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

J.P. Morgan ramps up recruitment for an untapped talent pool

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J.P. Morgan is stepping up its efforts to hire people with autism into the bank, and plans to employ “several hundred” within the next three years as it targets what it views as an untapped pool of talent.

“Around 80% to 90% of autistic people are unemployed,” says James Mahoney, executive director and head of autism at work at J.P. Morgan. “For us, that’s a talent pool. If you look at areas like technology – there’s a huge shortage of good people with high-level skills. It’s a sector that we know many autistic people excel in.”

J.P. Morgan’s efforts to hire people with autism have so far been focused on the U.S. There, it has 58 employees ‘on the spectrum,’ primarily within technology functions. In the UK it has just teamed up with Bath University to offer a Spring School for 30 students and recent graduates at its Bournemouth office in January.

In the UK, only 16% of autistic adults are in full-time employment, and 32% are in some kind of paid work, according to the National Autistic Society. Mahoney says that J.P. Morgan is not trying to offer “charity” to autistic people, but to tackle a missed opportunity.

“People often think of Dustin Hoffman in Rain Man, but there’s a much wider variety of characteristics on the autism spectrum,” he says. “Some are hyper-focused on an individual activity, can go for long periods without getting bored, have great attention to detail and are often very successful in jobs which are rule-bound and have clear, crisp boundaries.”

There are some high-profile examples of people on the spectrum who work in the financial sector. Tom Hayes, the UBS Libor trader sentenced to more than 10 years in prison for his attempts to manipulate the benchmark, was diagnosed with Asperger’s syndrome and was nicknamed ‘Rain Man’ by his colleagues. Michael Burry, the trader credited with spotting the CDO crash by author Michael Lewis in the Big Short, also has Asperger’s.

But Asperger’s is a form of High Functioning Autism. Banks have only recently started trying to add ‘neuro-diversity’ to their ranks. This term encompasses a variety of conditions including dyspraxia, dyslexia or ADHD, but recruitment efforts are currently focused on people with autism.

Deutsche Bank launched an internship last year for graduates with autism, UBS started a pilot scheme this year to create jobs for people with autism within its Nashville compliance team and Goldman Sachs has an autism at work programme.

Ray Coyle, CEO of Auticon, an IT consultancy that places people with autism into employment, says that these internships are a “welcome development”, but fail to address the bigger picture. For a start, they’re small scale – often four or five people – he says and are unlikely to create proportional representation in the workforce any time soon.

In the UK, 1 in 100 people are on the spectrum, while in the U.S. this figure is one in every 68 births. At J.P. Morgan, those 58 people represent a tiny proportion of its 251,503 employees, although the bank says there may be more people within its ranks who have not disclosed their condition.

“A lot of autistic people are long-term unemployed, and dropped out of the workforce despite having valuable skills and qualifications,” says Coyle. “Internships are not the right thing for them. They range from aged 20 to 60, often have PhDs and have been excluded from the workforce for up to 20 years.”

People with autism often excel in areas like compliance, software testing, cyber security and data analytics, says Coyle. All of these roles are currently facing a talent shortage within the financial sector and banks need to do more to attract people on the spectrum

The advantage of programmes specifically targeted at autistic people is that it raises awareness within the organisation, says Coyle, and encourages more people to disclose their condition and banks to change the way they recruit.

“A job interview is essentially a test of social interaction, and people on the spectrum really struggle with these,” he says. “We assess people purely on their skills and cognitive abilities.”

J.P. Morgan is also training its supervisors on how to manage autistic employees.

“Understanding interaction is a huge part of learning for the non-autistic community,” says Mahoney. “Often people give feedback using metaphors, humour or sarcasm and, often, autistic people don’t take these social cues. It has to be crisp and literal and we need to train our managers to empower our autistic employees.”

Have a tip, story or comment? Contact: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Photo: Getty Images

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Inside the new hottest investment banking jobs in the U.S.

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Bulge bracket investment banks are ramping up in unlikely destinations across the U.S. Away from their traditional Wall Street homes, deal-makers are moving to the likes of Atlanta, Dallas, Seattle and Toronto to capitalise on a growing revenue stream of middle market business.

To varying degrees, Wells Fargo Securities, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, J.P. Morgan and Bank of America Merrill Lynch are all in the market, and have been poaching from one another outside of New York. Now Goldman Sachs is entering the fray as well.

One recent hire is Ben Koch, an investment banker who joined Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s Dallas office as a managing director after working as a J.P. Morgan MD there for four years. Goldman is hiring senior bankers in industries where the firm lacks a top-tier presence and building out regional offices, bringing on a duo from Credit Suisse to cover business-services firms, such as consultants and staffing agencies, and a Citigroup banker to serve clients in the midstream energy space, according to Bloomberg.

“It’s quite logical that any bank expanding deeper into the middle-markets will eventually expand the financing and risk management advisory and derivatives functions into those regions as well – either by moving people away from their NY headquarters or by hiring locally,” says Greg Glickman, the founder of recruitment firm Glickman Advisors who previously worked at Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch and Nomura.

Despite the recent increase in attention from bulge-brackets, most middle-market companies are traditionally served by firms who specialize  – William Blair, Robert W. Baird & Co., Pacific Crest (now part of KeyBank), Jefferies, Harris Williams & Co. and others. They have long-term affiliations in the arena across industry sectors, and the best regional firms also have global reach.

“Baird, Blair and Jefferies are among the bigger regional players – Blair, in particular, has a solid financial sponsor coverage model,” says Carol Hartman, managing partner and the global financial services practice leader at recruitment firm DHR International. “There is also competition from some of the larger commercial banks, which have middle-market coverage for lending-focused activities and then convert to underwritings and other offerings when appropriate.

The big news here is that a New York-based bank is strategically targeting the middle market, which has generally been served by regional firms.

“If Goldman is hiring, it will be from top regional firms with great relationships with these companies,” Hartman says.

The pay is competitive with what Wall Street peers are earning

Alan Johnson, the founder of compensation consulting firm Johnson Associates, says that pay is typically 15%-20% less in locations outside of New York where banks are moving jobs. However, the lower cost of living often makes up the difference.

On the other hand, some recruiters say the compensation discrepancy from one city to another is negligible.

“Despite the disadvantages of being outside of financial hubs, it typically doesn’t mean lower pay from one location to another,” says Cesar DeLara, a senior consultant in the investment banking recruitment practice at Selby Jennings who recently relocated from New York to San Francisco. “Does that make Dallas or Florida more enticing for some people? Yes, because there’s no income tax.”

Investment banking talent grab in smaller cities

A cautionary tale is the bulge brackets that tried to build out their middle-market business three or four years ago but did not capitalize them properly or dedicate sufficient resources to them, according to DeLara.

It should be a wakeup call for competitors that Goldman is building out a middle-market investment banking group and presumably pouring sufficient money into it to make it a success. A good chunk of change has to go toward recruitment from competitors of all sizes.

“As more of the market share moves more toward the middle market, banks are starting to spread their coverage, not necessarily to the middle of nowhere, but to new cities that they weren’t covering previously,” DeLara says. “I’d imagine [the big Wall Street banks] have to start pulling talent from smaller and regional investment banks, pulling talent from elite middle-market banks – the Harris Williams, Robert W. Bairds and William Blairs of the world.

“Rather than relocating a ton of Wall Street investment bankers, they’ll be pulling talent from existing competitors in the regions, because those people will have the best books of business, whereas a New York banker wouldn’t have books in the areas they want to grow,” he says. “When you’re going to put a MD in a satellite office, they have to be familiar with the geography and be in the know with those local social circles.”

While there are certainly great job opportunities away from Wall Street, be sure to look before you leap. There are significant differences between the roles in remote regions versus those in New York City, and investment banking professionals often do not perceive them to be positives, according to Mike Brothers, a manager of financial services recruitment at Michael Page.

Bankers often have to relocate to fulfill these positions, and inherently take on the risk of being in a location where there may not be any exit opportunities.

“If they move to somewhere in Idaho, how many other banking positions will be available in the case that it doesn’t work out?” Brothers says. “Often times, the junior execution resources will still be based in one of the bank’s major office hubs, so you have to factor in the potential lapse in communication if your analysts and associates are across the country and in a different time zone.

“I have personally received feedback from senior bankers in remote locations that the staffing model for their deal teams becomes frustrating quickly, because they will start a mandate with one set of juniors, and over the course of executing that mandate, that junior team will be re-staffed or the roster will be changed, therefore creating more work for the senior banker to get everyone up to speed on the deal process,” he says.


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Morgan Stanley’s new guide to the best European banks to work for

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Now that banks’ third quarter results are a thing of the past, Morgan Stanley’s European investment banking analysts have had time to digest their implications. And after doing so, they’ve produced a report which reiterates our earlier conclusions: HSBC looks like the best European investment bank to work for now; Deutsche Bank and Barclays look like the worst.

Morgan Stanley’s findings can be summarized in the eight charts below. The four at the bottom are the most interesting – particularly those pertaining to sales and trading, where market share is expected to become increasingly concentrated over the next year as MiFID II takes effect.  

1. HSBC is the biggest European investment bank by revenues across the investment banking division and sales and trading 

Total investment banking revenues, third quarter 2017

Header 3

Top european investment banks

2. U.S. banks dominate the investment banking division league tables. HSBC is the best European

Investment banking division (IBD)

revenues, third quarter 2017

IBD revenues Q3 Morgan Stanley

Source: Morgan Stanley

3. UBS is the top European bank for equities sales and trading, but not the top bank overall 

Equities sales and trading revenues, third quarter 2017

Header 3

Morgan STanley equities q3

Source: Morgan Stanley

4. HSBC is also the top European bank for fixed income sales and trading 

Fixed income sales and trading revenues, third quarter 2017

Header 3

HSBC fixed income top

Source: Morgan Stanley

5. The investment banking divisions of UBS and Credit Suisse are gaining market share. Those of Deutsche, Barclays, HSBC (and Goldman Sachs) are not 

IBD market share

6. Beware the equities sales and trading divisions of Barclays and Deutsche Bank 

Equities market share 2

7. Beware the fixed income sales and trading divisions of Deutsche Bank and Barclays too  

Ficc market shares 3

8. Beware Deutsche’s investment bank as a whole. Choose HSBC (or Citi, or Bank of America) instead 

IBD market share

Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

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Giant $93bn Softbank Vision Fund has been quietly poaching investment bankers

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The world’s biggest tech investment fund has quietly been poaching from the junior ranks of bulge bracket investment banks, big buyout firms and top consultants.

Softbank’s Vision Fund, the $93bn giant backed by sovereign wealth funds and large corporations like Apple to invest in technology start-ups, has been hiring analysts and associates from the M&A teams of investment banks, large buyout firms and Big Three consultants in both London and San Francisco.

In London, Paul Davison, who spent five years at Rothschild, working across its TMT M&A and leveraged finance teams, joined in October. Lucio Di Ciaccio, an analyst at the Carlyle Group and an Astronautical Engineering graduate from MIT, was hired for the Vision Fund’s investment team earlier this month. They follow Louis Cho, a former associate at J.P. Morgan, who joined in May.

In San Francisco, Softbank has been hiring even more enthusiastically. Jessica Xu, a former analyst at Citigroup, joined its investment team in November as did Justin Nam, a former healthcare M&A analyst at Evercore and Kevin Chang, an analyst at J.P. Morgan.

Meanwhile, Hatim Sukhla, who worked at Goldman Sachs before moving into private equity – and who was latterly in a strategy role at consumer group The Honest Company – signed up earlier this month, as did Mihir Jain from the investment team from Boston Consulting Group, where he was an associate.

In June, Softbank reportedly had 15-20 people investing its money in offices in Mayfair, San Francisco and Toyko and had plans to hire “dozens” more people for its newly formed investment team. Its London office is now reportedly 25 people-strong.

Rajeev Misra, who headed up global credit trading at Deutsche Bank, has been leading up Softbank’s huge tech fund since January and has been tapping his former colleagues. Colin Fan, the former head of Deutsche’s investment banking and trading unit, joined in June. Akshay Naheta, a former Deutsche Bank proprietary trader, and Saleh Romeih, a former Deutsche Bank MD who left for Goldman Sachs in 2013 and Manish Varma, who was head of UK lending and deposits and structured solutions at Deutsche, all joined this year.

Softbank’s fund, which has received commitments from the Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, Apple and Mubadala (one of a number of state-owned investment firms in the United Arab Emirates) has also been hiring for its operational staff.

Financial News reported a number of HR, admin and accounting appointments in October, and this recruitment spree has continued.

Victoria James, a former senior associate at PwC has signed up as an associate in its operations team and Raymond Birch, who worked in PwC’s management consulting division, joined as a VP of liability and currency management Spencer Collins, who was a secondee from lawyers White & Case since May, joined full time as legal lead on its M&A transaction team in October.

Have a tip, story or comment? Contact: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Photo: Getty Images

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Brexit supporter claiming he was bullied out of Goldman Sachs is a fake

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If you’re a UKIP-voting Brexit supporter, the notion that one of your clan was ejected from the upper levels of Goldman Sachs simply for sharing your views is probably enough to spark outrage. Hold back on the apoplexy, however: it’s not true.

Someone calling himself “Dr. Stephen (Steve) Cawford” has taken to both LinkedIn and Twitter to boast about his history as a managing director at Goldman Sachs and to claim that he left the bank as a full time employee after he was asked to vote remain in last July’s referendum. “All the staff bullied me there [about voting to leave the EU],” he told us, “but I still did.”

We asked Goldman Sachs about Cawford (who still claims to be earning £100k a year working for the firm as an external advisor). It has no record of him. Nor does it have any record of Cawford’s alleged ex-Goldman Sachs boss, the curiously named ‘Laymore Hattens.’

Stephen Cawford

Cawford also claims to be a member of UKIP (which has no record of him) and to work for a Brexit-inspired asset management firm, ‘Asset Management UK’, which appears to be soliciting funds but is not registered with the UK Financial Conduct Authority.

We asked both Cawford and Hattens to comment on the apparent inconsistencies in their profiles. Neither responded to our request.

Bankers who support Brexit certainly exist, even at Goldman Sachs. There may even be bankers who are aligned to UKIP. ‘Stephen Cawford,’ however, is not one of them. Nor is ‘Laymore Hattens.’ Indignation over ostracized Brexiteers in the City can be saved for another day.


Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com
Bear with us if you leave a comment at the bottom of this article: all our comments are moderated by actual human beings! Sometimes these humans might be asleep, or away from their desks, so it may take a while for your comment to appear. Eventually it will – unless it’s offensive or libelous (in which case it won’t.)


Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com
Bear with us if you leave a comment at the bottom of this article: all our comments are moderated by actual human beings! Sometimes these humans might be asleep, or away from their desks, so it may take a while for your comment to appear. Eventually it will – unless it’s offensive or libelous (in which case it won’t.)

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Jefferies reunites with MD-level equity analyst after six years apart

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David Katz, a senior ranking analyst covering the gaming, lodging and leisure industries, has returned to Jefferies as an MD after a six-year hiatus.

Katz was an MD and a senior equity analyst in the gaming, lodging and leisure team at Telsey Advisory Group (TAG), Dana Telsey’s equity research, sales-trading, investment banking and consulting firm focused on the retail and consumer sector.

But last month, he returned to Jefferies. Katz’s first stint as an MD and equity research analyst at Jefferies began in 2010 but lasted less than two years as he prepared the launch of a new firm. A few months later, he became managing partner and co-founder of GreyCap Advisors, a capital markets strategic advisory services firm primarily focused on small- and mid-cap public companies.

Katz joined Jefferies the first time around after working his way up to MD and senior equity research analyst of gaming, lodging and leisure at CIBC World Markets/Oppenheimer & Co. in New York.

Prior to becoming an equity researcher on Wall Street, Katz was a principal and co-founder of Harlyn Textile Mills/Ozzie Industries, a privately held apparel and textiles manufacturing business.

Jefferies continues to poach senior investment bankers from its larger competitors.

Earlier this year, it lured Timothy Wons, a 12-year veteran as executive director of public finance at J.P. Morgan, to its Chicago office as MD of not-for-profit healthcare investment banking.

In addition, Christopher Dickinson left J.P. Morgan in September to go to Jefferies, where he is now an investment banking MD.

At least when it comes to emerging markets trading and middle-market M&A advisory, the U.S. investment bank has ambitions to compete with the big players – and it’s been hiring.

In March, Jefferies brought in John Bills as an MD in the power, utilities and renewables group in the bank’s New York headquarters. He was poached from BNP Paribas, where he was a managing director and previously the head of power and structured transactions.

That same month, Andrew “Shorty” Shortland stepped down from his position as the head of international equities at Jefferies in London.

Photo credit: Phoenixns/GettyImages
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The easiest banking jobs to get in Singapore

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If you’re thinking of starting a search for a new banking job in Singapore, it’s first worth considering whether your efforts will be worthwhile.

If there are a lot of other people looking for work in your field now may not be a good time to enter the job market.

To help you decide, we compared the amount of Singapore-based vacancies with the number of local CVs on our database across 18 key finance job functions to produce the chart below. We restricted the resumes to those updated within the past year, indicating that they belong to people interested in finding new jobs.

If you’re in one of the sectors towards the top of the chart, your job search could be fairly straightforward because you will face the least competition from other candidates. If you’re at the bottom, you might want to stick with your current job.

Quants, for example, will have a comparatively ‘easy’ time finding a new job in Singapore – there are just seven Singapore-based candidates on our database for every available job in the city state. Continued demand for analytical skills and a high academic barrier to entering the quant profession have created a perpetually tight job market.

The chart shows that skill shortages in compliance (eight CVs per vacancy) have not gone away, even as the near-decade-long recruitment boom in the functions starts to tail off as banks reach their desired headcount levels.

More surprisingly, given recent offshoring to markets like India and the Philippines, operations also features towards the top of our ranking. Many of the current back-office vacancies in Singapore are senior and/or in specialist areas like client onboarding where banks find it more difficult to recruit new staff.

Unlike other sectors, the high ranking for hedge funds on our chart doesn’t indicate an ‘easy’ job search – it reflects the small pool of people with hedge fund experience already on their CVs. If you’re looking for a hedge fund job, you’ll also be up against elite candidates with investment banking backgrounds.

The bottom of our list shows the impact of recent redundancies in banking, which have reduced vacancies and increased the number of unemployed candidates. Fixed income and commodities – two sectors particularly affected by job losses at global banks – have high ratios of 31 and 33 respectively.

It’s also bad in equities – you’ll be competing with 23 other candidates if you look for a job in Singapore now, according to our data. Several banks, notably Credit Suisse and Barclays, have culled or trimmed their equities teams in Asia over the past two years as their struggle for profitability.


Image credit: DimaBerkut, Getty

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Meet six Hong Kong bankers shaking up Asia’s hottest sector

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Senior technology media and telecoms (TMT) bankers are in high demand in Hong Kong this year (both banks and technology companies are hiring them), even as MDs and directors covering other industries have been cut back.

Technology led all Asia Pacific (ex-Japan) sectors in IPO volume during the first nine months of 2017, raising $8.8bn via 136 deals, according to Dealogic. Hong Kong has become a hub for tech listings this year. Shares in Tencent’s ebook subsidiary China Literature soared 86% on debut last week in the city’s largest tech IPO in 10 years,

TMT is the main “bright spot” in Asia in terms of investment banking sectors this year, says Yvette Kwan, a former APAC investment banking COO at UBS, now a partner at consultancy Quinlan & Associates.

Who are the bankers leading the battle for TMT business in Hong Kong? Here’s a selection.

Neel Laungani, head of TMT APAC, Deutsche Bank

The most recent senior hire in Asian TMT, Laungani moved to Deutsche from Standard Chartered just last month. Laungani joined Stan Chart in 2011 and worked as head of global TMT coverage. He was previously at Credit Suisse and Lehman Brothers.

Peter Chu, co-head, Asia Pacific TMT investment banking, Morgan Stanley

Chu is a senior rainmaker who joined Morgan Stanley from Goldman Sachs in November 2005 as TMT co-head, alongside Daniel Wetstein. He held several roles during his 14 years at Goldman (punctuated by two years at McKinsey), including COO of Asia Pacific ex-Japan investment banking, and head of Asia telecom, media, and internet.

Randy Gelber, head of technology, media and telecom, Asia Pacific, UBS

Industry veteran Gelber moved to UBS in April from SMBC Nikko, where he was head of Americas investment banking, based in New York. This is his third stint in charge of an Asian TMT team, having previously run TMT for the region at Barclays (2010 to 2014) and Merrill Lynch (2009 to 2010).

Jan Metzger, global co-head technology investment banking, Citi

Metzger was promoted into his Hong Kong-based global role in January this year in a management shake-up of Citi’s investment bank. He joined Citi in November 2015 to run its TMT corporate and investment banking business in APAC. He previously spent 10 years at Credit Suisse, latterly as head of TMT investment banking for Asia Pacific.

Hubert Chang, head of Asia Pacific TMT, Barclays

Chang worked in Merrill Lynch’s tech-focused Palo Alto office for nine years, where he reached director rank. He then left the banking sector in 2009 and moved to Hawaii to become president and CEO of Energy Industries Corporation, a renewable energy firm. Chang returned to finance and joined Barclays in Hong Kong in 2012.

Jwalant Nanavati, co-head, TMT investment banking, APAC, BNP Paribas

Nanavati started his Hong Kong-based role in January 2016, having moved from BNP’s Mumbai office where he was head of advisory and capital markets for India. He previously worked for Deutsche Bank in New York, Hong Kong and Mumbai for about nine years, latterly as a conglomerates, TMT, natural resources and real estate coverage banker.

Image credit: xavierarnau, Getty

Morning Coffee: J.P. Morgan alights upon solution for saving London banking jobs. Sudden death of the sales trader

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Will tens of thousands of jobs move out of London because of Brexit, or will they not? Following recent reassuring reports that banks could avoid a big transfer of jobs with so-called “back to back” trading, which would allow trades to take place in London whilst being booked in the EU, things have been sounding a lot more iffy.

Deutsche Bank told a conference on Tuesday that it needs a “clear view” on the situation by early 2018, when it will need to start implementing its contingency plans.  Sally Dewar, head of regulatory affairs at J.P. Morgan, subsequently informed a House of Lords Committee that the bank will need to “start taking decisions around informing clients” by the end of the first quarter, and that once it’s done so, those decisions will be difficult to unravel. Lloyd Blankfein added to the heat by Tweeting yesterday that he was “struck by the positive energy” in Paris, where a government committed to economic reform is fortuitously combined with good food.

There may, however, be a way out the murk. – J.P. Morgan thinks it has a solution. Or not.

Imparted by Dewar to the House of Lords Committee, J.P. Morgan’s plan for saving London banking jobs involves giving up on “equivalence” and going instead for a bilateral “bespoke agreement” with the EU. Equivalence is no good, said Dewar: it doesn’t cover everything and could be revoked at any time by the EU. What J.P. Morgan has in mind is instead a, “novel, unique, new style of free trade agreement that would go beyond what’s been previously negotiated in the past,” Dewar said. An agreement covering a, “broad range of financial services and a broad range of clients.” The bank’s reportedly been liaising with the British Treasury on its plan. – Is this what Jamie Dimon was referring to last week when he said he felt reassured after meeting prime minister Theresa May and Chancellor Philip Hammond?

Maybe. But J.P. Morgan’s plan sounds as fantastic as the man posing as an ex-Goldman Sachs banker who was bullied out of the firm because of Brexit. While J.P. says the EU will have reason to go along with the plan because of, “the uniqueness of the relationship between the UK and the EU,” there’s no indication that it will do so. And, as with everything else, any new agreement would need to be ratified by each member of the Union individually – which hardly seems likely to happen by March 2019 given an agreement has yet to be mooted, let alone agreed upon in principle and then drawn up in practice. In the meantime, the Telegraph says J.P. Morgan has already started telling staff in London whether they’ll be moving.

Separately, the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority casually did away with the jobs of sales traders yesterday. The Financial Times reports that the FCA suddenly said that the content produced by sales traders will count as research under MiFID II. This means that sales traders will no longer be able to talk about trends and offer “market colour” to clients without charging separately.  “It makes the job of the salesman ever more redundant because he’s not allowed to have a view on anything,” said a senior executive at a London stockbroker.

Meanwhile:

The ECB has criticized banks that only want a “letter box” in the EU after Brexit, says they’ll need “substance” locally. (Bloomberg) 

Bank of America plans to move 200 sales and trading jobs to Paris. (Bloomberg)  

Making MD at Goldman Sachs is a hideously stressful process that goes on for four or five months. (Financial News)

Wall Street Journal perfects the art of making John Cryan do something he doesn’t want to. (WSJ) 

What does it mean when a investor specializing in distressed investments takes a 3% stake in Deutsche Bank? (Bloomberg) 

J.P. Morgan’s chief technology officer for new product development joined a data and technology analytics firm. (The Trade News) 

The UK is going to offer 2,000 extra visas to technologists. (Reuters) 

Traders will get smaller bonuses this year, unless they work on electronic trading systems. (Business Insider) 

Citi hired a Goldman banker to work with U.S. private equity funds. (Business Insider) 

“I’ve already been to four Brexit parties to celebrate finance professionals moving out of London.” (Le Monde)

Moderate alcohol consumption improves your ability to speak a foreign language. (BPS) 


Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

Bear with us if you leave a comment at the bottom of this article: all our comments are moderated by actual human beings! Sometimes these humans might be asleep, or away from their desks, so it may take a while for your comment to appear. Eventually it will – unless it’s offensive or libelous (in which case it won’t.)

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Photo credit: Save Me by Ben Jeffrey is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Morgan Stanley’s hot young trader has switched to BlueCrest Capital Management

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If you’re a 20-something trader at Morgan Stanley suddenly thrust into the limelight by appear on the Forbes 30 under 30 list, expect the job offers to flood in.

Jonathan Birnbaum, the 29-year-old COO of the U.S. bank’s credit trading business, was named in the 2016 list. After a stint in fintech, he’s now head of fixed income trading execution at Bridgewater Associates.

Now, Guillaume Rabate, a 28-year-old U.S. dollar interest rates swaps trader who made the cut last year, has left Morgan Stanley for BlueCrest Capital Management in New York.

Rabate, who was promoted to executive director in January this year, has joined BlueCrest as a portfolio manager after eight years at Morgan Stanley. He ran one of Wall Street’s biggest interest rates swaps desks, according to Forbes.

Rabate went to Imperial College London to study engineering and interned at Goldman Sachs in the City within its markets business. He then did a post graduate degree in finance at Princeton and interned within Morgan Stanley’s interest rates derivatives trading business, which he joined as an associate in 2010.

Forbes released its 2018 30 under 30 in finance list earlier this week. As ever, fintech founders make up a good proportion of the names, along with young analysts and portfolio managers within hedge funds, but investment banks’ traders were also in the mix. Maria Egee, who is building a credit default swaps desk at Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Anne Victoir Auriault, also 29, a VP senior trader on Goldman’s index arbitrage strategies both made the cut.

Have a tip, story or comment? Contact: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Photo: Getty Images

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Goldman Sachs juniors keep joining a PE fund for ‘moderate’ pay

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Private equity is dying. So wrote Professor John Colley of the UK’s Warwick University Business School in an article for the Conversation this week. Blighted by a crowded market, competition for deals and risky investments, PE will make increasingly marginal returns, said Colley. – Try telling this to the junior Goldman Sachs bankers who still see the business as the crock at the end of the rainbow.

Goldman juniors’ new preferred PE fund seems to be Summit Partners, a Boston Massachusetts based-fund focused on technology, healthcare and “growth products”.

Summit has had an office in London since 2013. Its most recent accounts say it employed 18 people in the UK at the end of 2016, the same as the year before. However, Summit seems to have been adding juniors in 2017, and Goldman analysts have been only too willing to oblige.

Summit’s most recent London hire is Nik Ohri, a former Goldman leveraged finance analyst who quit the firm after only a year. In May it hired Matt Heims, a former Goldman consumer banking analyst, who quit after 23 months. Summit’s San Francisco office also hired Jessie Sheff, a former Goldman FX saleswoman who joined this summer after three years at GS.

Summit’s secret isn’t in its salaries. Average compensation at the fund’s UK operation last year was just £151k ($200k) compared to $337k at Goldman Sachs.

Needless to say, though, private equity’s appeal isn’t in the fixed pay. It’s in the carried interest, which gets paid out after deals are successfully exited and returns exceed a specified hurdle rate. This is what Goldman’s juniors are undoubtedly after. They just need to hope that Professor Colley’s private equity prognosis is flawed.


Have a confidential story, tip, or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com
Bear with us if you leave a comment at the bottom of this article: all our comments are moderated by actual human beings! Sometimes these humans might be asleep, or away from their desks, so it may take a while for your comment to appear. Eventually it will – unless it’s offensive or libelous (in which case it won’t.)

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