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  • Leveraged financiers out of luck

    The bottom has fallen out of the leveraged finance market, but there don't seem to have been many redundancies – yet. Sharad Jain, director of the financial institutions ratings group at Standard & Poors, says there’s certainly been a significant increase in pricing associated with lending into leveraged finance transactions. “Given the current market volatility, the Australian banks are increasingly cautious about lending to corporates, particularly those who are more leveraged,” he... Read more

  • What’s happening to banks' IT hiring?

    The spate of senior-level technology departures at St George Bank continues. Acting chief information officer, Greg Booker, was the latest to jump ship. Booker is off to wealth management and insurance company ING Australia. St George failed to comment on the departure or whether it signalled a major upheaval for IT jobs at the bank or in the sector as a whole. While St George remains tight lipped, recruiter Simon... Read more

  • Electric demand for energy traders

    Volumes of electricity and futures options have hit record levels and energy trading desks are fizzing. d-cyphaTrade, the energy market’s official product sponsor and development company, says the number of financial energy trading desks has doubled since June 2007, with the banks and options trading houses among the biggest movers and shakers. Dean Price, general manager of d-cypha, explains, “The Australian energy trading industry has recently boomed because of the lure... Read more

  • Bank jobs plummet

    It's not looking good if you fancy landing a job in the Australian financial services market. The Aussie banking sector job market is floundering, according to the most recent monthly instalment of the Olivier Job Index. Report author Bob Olivier, a director of recruiter Olivier Group, attributes the poor results – down 5.12% in February – to the credit crunch, interest rate rises and the stock market sell-off. “Sub-prime write-offs have hurt... Read more

  • Wet season could signal job deluge for agri-specialists

    Are we about to see torrential demand for bankers and traders with agricultural expertise? Maybe – the recent end of the drought in some areas and rising prices for soft commodities are creating opportunities both for traders specialising in agricultural products, and for agri-economists who can predict what’s going to happen next in the sector. According to the Australian Financial Review, agri-economists in particular are now hot property, with new listed... Read more

  • Time to step up compliance hiring?

    Could it be banks have failed in their 30-year crusade against insider trading? Yes, according to one senior banker. Last month, Caliburn chairman Peter Hunt was reported in the Melbourne Age as saying, “Unusual price movements ahead of takeover announcements and capital raisings in this market are frustratingly commonplace.” Hunt’s frank comments follow hot on the heels of the SocGen fiasco and trader suspensions at Credit Suisse. Will banks now rush... Read more

  • Stock options under water

    It’s been a rough six months for Aussie banks, and one leading stockbroker says more losses could be in store. Since August last year, shares in NAB have plummeted 26%, ANZ shareholders have lost 23%, and Babcock & Brown and Macquarie shares have also taken decent hits. Grant Williams, a director of Sydney-based stockbroker Reynolds, says without a crystal ball it’s difficult to say for sure where share prices are headed.... Read more

  • Accountants: soaring salaries, bottoming bonuses

    Research from international recruiter Robert Walters reveals middle office specialists in Australia are hot to trot in 2008. The report says product control is in red hot demand and that a Sydney-based product accountant/controller with three to five years’ experience can earn AU$125k, compared with AU$105k last year. Likewise, financial accountants can currently earn AU$125k, compared with AU$100k in 2007. Neil Dyball, associate director of the banking division at Robert... Read more

  • Emerging markets set to create opps for Aussie bankers

    There are plenty of pessimists around the Australian investment markets but Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital Investors, isn’t one of them. The leading Aussie economist says despite the global downturn and rising interest rates locally, 2008 is likely to see growth remain vigorous in Australia, thanks to strong investment and exports. “Increases of 60-80% in prices for iron ore and coal will add just over $2bn a... Read more

  • Aussie appetite for bankers slowing

    There are signs that Australia’s appetite for banking talent isn’t quite what it was. According to the latest Olivier Internet Job Index, banking and finance was one of the slowest growing sectors in the past 12 months, dropping 1.45% in January. Is the sky falling in on the banking recruitment market? Bob Olivier, the report’s author, and director at Olivier Recruitment Group, says he’s not convinced: “We’re putting it down to interest... Read more

  • Are female bankers underpaid?

    Senior women in Australia earn 50% less than their male counterparts, according to a Federal Government report. Is the same true in banking? No – at least not according to Bob Olivier, a director at the Olivier Recruitment Group in Sydney. He says the report’s findings astonished him. “My experience is that clients won’t offer a job to Julie rather than Steve to save on salary. It might be that if... Read more

  • Australia: land of false promise?

    Australia hasn’t lived up to its promise for ANZ’s ex-group managing director, Steve Targett. How common is it for immigrant bankers to come unstuck? In the case of Targett, the stakes are high and getting higher. Last month, he upped his damages claim from AU$2.1m to a hefty AU$57m, according to a report in the Australian Financial Review. Targett, a former banker with Lloyds TSB, claims he left his well-paid job... Read more

  • Crying out for credit analysts

    It’s created grim consequences for many bankers, but ironically the credit squeeze is proving a boon for quality credit analysts, says a Sydney-based recruiter. Patrick Everest, partner at Jon Michel Executive Search, says credit risk professionals are now in higher demand than at any time over the last 12 to 18 months. “Both the institutional teams at the domestic banks as well as the global investment banks are looking for talent,”... Read more

  • Strategists needed to help survive the markets

    Black Tuesday saw panic selling wipe over AU$100bn off share prices. Will oscillating equity markets feed demand for strategists to help make sense of the ride? The events of 22 January 2008 are sure to leave a mark on the Aussie share market. Though it recovered towards the end of that week, it has since deteriorated again. What will happen next? It’s down to strategists to predict. Adnan Kucukalic, strategist for... Read more

  • Bad news is good news for restructuring jobs

    Collapsing stock markets and tightening credit are bad news for most investment bankers. Restructuring specialists are the exception. If, as looks increasingly likely, the US economy lurches into recession, one senior economist warns that it’s only a matter of time before local defaults start to hot up. Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy and chief economist at AMP Capital Investors, says, “I would expect that if the US goes into recession... Read more

  • 2008: Good year/bad year

    2007 ended badly, and 2008 may well start the same, but this year will be better for some things than others. 2008 will be a good year for… Ops jobs Junior and more menial roles may be heading to Asia, but recruiters say there’s still going to be ample demand for senior banking operations staff in Australia. “People with 10 years-plus operations experience, who want to broaden their experience, will have plenty of... Read more

  • 2007: Good year/bad year

    It was a year of two halves for Aussie bankers: the first good, the second bad. But some had it better and worse than others. 2007 was a good year for: Wealth managers 1 July 2007 marked a radical change in the way Australians plan for retirement. As a result superannuation inflows went through the roof. Recruiter Luke Heath from Chandler Heath, says wealth managers, in particular, made hay. “Private bankers, stockbrokers, financial... Read more

  • Getting out of Goldman Sachs JB Were

    The local branch of the world’s most successful investment bank is bleeding staff. What’s going on? In the past month, 11 members of Goldman Sachs JB Were’s Perth team have defected to Citigroup, ...

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  • Facing up to Facebook

    Social networking is all the rage, but will it really help you land a job in investment banking? A quick look on the ever-growing Linked In and Facebook websites shows listings of managing direct ...

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  • Time to pack your bags for Asia?

    With the Hang Seng breaking through 30,000 for the first time this month, now’s a good time for Aussie bankers to break into Asia. Andrew Valentine, from recruiter Jon Michel Executive Search, says, “Unemployment is low and regional GDP growth is outpacing the rest of the world, so demand for investment banking services and for skilled investment bankers is likely to continue.” “The advantage for Australian bankers is exposure to larger and... Read more

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