The contrasting fortunes of AMP’s fund management and risk businesses are mirrored by the wider recruitment market in these sectors. While AMP’s fund management division reported a fall in earnings, the group’s results were boosted by the strong performance of its risk unit (Money Management). AMP Capital’s chief economist Shane Oliver tells us that the credit crisis, oil price rises and high interest rates created a “perfect storm” for... Read more
By eFinancialCareers Australia 10 Sep 2008 - 0 comments
Fund management professionals looking for jobs in Australia are encountering a tough market, but certain skill sets and international experience are still sought after. The number of asset management job vacancies has declined in just the last two months, according to Lee Humphrey, a fund management principal at Derwent Executive. Humphrey says most of the movement is replacement hiring. “There are still some headcount rises, but these tend to... Read more
By Simon Mortlock 27 Aug 2008 - 0 comments
Challenger Financial Service Group has been rocked by the shock exit of chief executive Mike Tilley. Tilley walked out less than a year after securing a contract extension until 2011 because ...
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Would you forsake your hard-earned management fee and give it away free to a charity? That’s just what’s happening at new managed fund Third Link Growth Fund, where almost all of its 1.4% fee ...
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Credit Suisse has unveiled plans to double staff numbers in India and isn’t the only bank upping staff numbers in the region - Swiss rival UBS is also looking to double its Indian headcount and the li ...
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Are investment banks really wielding the knife in as measured a manner as official data indicates? We've often discussed the disconnect between numbers stated in Wall Street layoff announcements, a ...
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Too much experience can be a career-killer, especially in today's hyper-competitive job market. So is it legitimate to delete your first job or three, in hopes of erasing some telltale age-lines from ...
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Many a pundit has ascribed the economy's erstwhile run-up to enthusiastic consumer spending - and the recent downturn to the U.S. consumer's over-reliance on debt, particularly creative sub-prime mort ...
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What is it about ABN AMRO employees that’s so irresistible to Babcock & Brown (B&B)? The ASX-listed investment bank has poached ABN’s entire Indian M&A group, having nicked its infrastructure team 18 months ago. ABN staff might well be desirable, but this latest raid was motivated more by location: India. While outsourcing retail support roles to the sub-continent is common, we are now starting to see banks, including B&B... Read more
By eFinancialCareers Australia 20 May 2008 - 5 comments
Forget ‘Shanghai, Dubai, or goodbye’. Is a move to an emerging market really a one-way bet for your career? Banks are busy transferring as many staff as possible away from the stagnant centres ...
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This is what Greg Coffey, the Aussie hedge fund trader who’s now based in London, apparently does. Coffey was big news last month when he left hedge fund GLG – giving up $250m in GLG shares i ...
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It’s left the finances of some of Australia’s biggest local governments in poor shape, but Lehman Brothers is adamant the Grange Securities fiasco and the credit squeeze won’t force an early exit from the domestic market. The global i-bank has grown its Australian staff by 50-60 over the past 12 months, according to Michelle Sprod, head of marketing at Lehmans. “We will continue to grow as the market dictates and... Read more
By Anthony O'Brien 28 Apr 2008 - 2 comments
Forget the US bulge bracket – Australian private banks are the new kids on the block in Asia, and they’re hiring voraciously. Macquarie Bank launched its Asian private wealth business in Singapore in March this year to target the booming regional market. National Australia Bank is also aggressively expanding in Asia, says Sicilia Lim, a senior consultant at recruiters Robert Walters. Lim says the Australians and other new niche... Read more
By Simon Mortlock 25 Apr 2008 - 3 comments
Domestic and international bond markets returned to favour in the first quarter of 2008. A report from Morningstar indicates the domestic bond index jumped 2.21%, while hedged international bonds chalked up a 2.72% return for the quarter. Citigroup’s credit sector specialist, Mark Reade, says corporate bond volumes are also strong, with the banks and AAA Kangaroo issuing at lofty levels. “It’s been so strong that almost AU$20bn in corporate bonds... Read more
By Anthony O'Brien 22 Apr 2008 - 0 comments
Forget the credit crunch – infrastructure recruitment is continuing as if it never happened. “Everyone’s hiring in that space at the moment,” says Melissa Tal at recruiter Michael Page. Local and global banks are chasing Macquarie and Babcock & Brown’s lead. Others in the sector agree: “We definitely see it as an important part of our future,” says Mark John, head of infrastructure and utilities at Westpac. “It’s an... Read more
By eFinancialCareers Australia 21 Apr 2008 - 0 comments
First quarter 2008 was a nightmare for world share markets, as investor confidence was squeezed by sizeable bad debt writedowns by banks across the globe and mounting evidence that the US is headed for recession. The MSCI World Index finished the quarter down 12.4% in AU$ terms, contributing to a minus 14.6% return for the year to 31 March. Portfolio mix still global Despite the gloom, Australian institutional and retail... Read more
By Anthony O'Brien 16 Apr 2008 - 0 comments
Melbourne might be Australia’s top city for sports and the arts, but arch rival Sydney has a clear lead when it comes to providing jobs for bankers. If you want to make a real impact in the finance in ...
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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
By Anthony O'Brien 20 Mar 2008 - 1 comment
The US financial services industry is burning, but who’s to say Sydney’s so safe? Bear Stearns doesn’t have an Australian office and Macquarie and Babcock made healthy profits in 2007, but that doe ...
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Forget US business schools, a new study suggests MBAs from China see the biggest boost to their earnings once the course has finished. The Financial Times’ 2008 MBA report found that alumni from Shanghai’s Jiao Tong University and Beijing’s China Europe International Business School (CEIBS) land the biggest salary increases upon graduation – 177% and 157% respectively. By comparison, graduates from a big name like the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School... Read more
By Nic Paton 10 Mar 2008 - 1 comment