An article on our US site has created a furore over the relative merits of a CFA over an MBA. Here's the potted version. According to the US commentators/ranters, here are the positives for both ...
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If there really are so many jobs to be had in Australia's finance sector, why is it so hard to land one?
A few weeks ago we ran a story suggesting Australia's finance employers are struggling ...
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If you want a change of job, now would be a good time to go for it. Manpower’s Annual Talent Shortage Survey exposes the extent to which Australia’s finance firms are crying out for staff. It says 61% of Australian employers cannot find qualified staff to fill vacancies. And of the 10 most critical sectors, finance (at number 4) and engineering (at number 2) were the only professional sectors experiencing trouble:... Read more
Anonymous 10 Apr 2007 - 23 comments
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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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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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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Are expanding workloads upsetting the delicate equilibrium of analyst/associate relations? Logan Naidu, a consultant at recruitment firm Cornell Partnership in London, says they are: "There's more stress, they get more tense, and it's easier to get ratty with each other." One associate (and former analyst) at a major European investment bank says associates who behave with Ted Bundy-like compassion are the main reason analysts quit: "The culture in investment banks is... Read more
Anonymous 14 Jun 2007 - 10 comments
When former St George Bank chief executive Gail Kelly moves across to become CEO of Westpac next February she will still be the only female in Australia to head a bank. While all the major and se ...
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An analyst at UBS in New York appears to have resigned in style. The analyst, apparently part of UBS’s US global healthcare group, sent an email to his bosses at 7am last Sunday, informing them h ...
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Macquarie Bank has been dubbed the "millionaire's factory" for over a decade, despite the Sydney-based bank's apparent objections. But now there's no denying it. It is believed that nearly all the 2,076 staff who sit at "director" level – that is associate directors, divisional directors, executive directors and above – received at least AU$1m (US$824k) in the past year. The bank's annual report revealed managing director Allan Moss and investment bank head... Read more
Anonymous 21 May 2007 - 8 comments
Is it possible to be too experienced for the Australian market? This is what some of you have been claiming in the comments on our recent article on the seeming lack of Australian jobs. Off the record, recruiters say it's true. The problem seems to be that the lure of the Sydney lifestyle is encouraging bankers from overseas to apply for jobs that are way too junior for them. And local recruiters... Read more
Anonymous 05 Jun 2007 - 7 comments
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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Most Aussie investment bankers plan to have their feet up by the pool well before middle-age, according to our latest poll. Just over 70% of those who responded reckoned they would have chucked in banking by the age of 45, with the rest being gone by the time they get to the big five-o. But most don't particularly want to retire too early either; just 40% want to be vegging in... Read more
By eFinancialCareers UK 06 Jun 2007 - 6 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 hot, summer’s come early and more people want to work in Australia than ever. Can they negotiate an expat payout? Probably not. The glory days of houses, cars, maids, gardeners and school fe ...
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What makes working for Goldman Sachs (or Goldman Sachs JBWere) quite so lucrative? Here’s our verdict… 1. It makes more money. Net revenues per head in 2006 were US$1.4m (AU$1.8m). This compared to US$678k at Lehman Brothers, for example. At 43.7% as a proportion of revenues, compensation costs were lower than at most other banks on the Street (shareholders are not being fleeced). 2. It works on bigger... Read more
Anonymous 19 Mar 2007 - 5 comments
Now that it's that time of year again when you used to salivate about getting paid… is your biggest year-end purchase going to be a tighter belt? Whether on Wall Street or the City, government honc ...
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Are long hours, high pressure and bonus obsession worth it? The premature death of a close relative has helped one ex-banker put things into perspective. Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been ...
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Most would-be bankers in Australia plan to work overseas if they can. This is the finding of a recent survey by graduate research company Universum, who asked Australia's finance graduates what they wanted from a career. They found 47% of women and 51% of men plan to make a swift exit and work overseas. They're also keen on having a life outside work – not something banks are traditionally strong on. 60%... Read more
By Jo Studdert 17 Sep 2007 - 4 comments
It used to be that having an MBA qualification was a fast track to working your way up the corporate ladder. Not any more. These days, recruiters tell us an MBA's still nice to have on your CV, b ...
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