The new Singapore Mercantile Exchange (SMX) is searching for staff as it prepares for trading in early 2009. SMX is looking to boost its current 15-strong headcount, according to a director-level spokesman. He tells us: “We are recruiting aggressively at the moment and expect to have about 75 staff in place by the time we go live. From there, we aim to grow to about 100 and we will... Read more
By Simon Mortlock 04 Sep 2008 - 0 comments
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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Working for a niche brokerage firm in Australia? Your days of independence look numbered as the chimes of consolidation ring round the brokerage industry. Southern Cross Equities’ recent sell-ou ...
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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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Babcock & Brown, Macquarie Group, Allco Finance – they’ve all suffered at the hands of short-sellers. But now a Federal parliamentary committee is calling for a massive overhaul of the disclosure rule ...
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Cantor Fitzgerald has plans to further expand its headcount in Hong Kong and Singapore, following the opening of a new office in the Lion City. And it’s looking at the i-banks as a source of fresh talent. The US brokerage, which also employs about 50 people in Hong Kong, has taken on five Singaporean sales traders to service the hedge fund and asset management sectors. William Selig, Cantor’s Singapore managing... Read more
By Simon Mortlock 11 Jun 2008 - 0 comments
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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If Meredith Whitney’s right, Citi’s going to the dogs no matter how hard Vikram Pandit tries to bed it down amongst the roses. Whitney says Pandit faces an “impossible feat” in turning Ci ...
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Now may be a good time to get your CV to Deutsche Bank – especially if you work for Citigroup. A major recruitment drive is expected at Deutsche in Hong Kong as the German giant gears up for its third-quarter 2010 move to Kowloon’s International Commerce Centre. And Citigroup high fliers could be top of its hit list. Alice Liu, a director at search firm Pelham, says Deutsche has... Read more
By Simon Mortlock 15 May 2008 - 1 comment
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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There is drama galore in the murky world of securitization, but for bankers’ jobs the outlook seems decidedly tragic. It remains to be seen whether the recent decision by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) to buy AU$780m of mortgage-backed bonds will help to kick-start the market, says one leading economist, who asked not to be named. In the short-term at least, this isn’t exactly sweet music for... Read more
By Anthony O'Brien 06 May 2008 - 0 comments
ANZ may be in a mess back in Melbourne, but in Singapore it’s looking for local talent to kick start its new commodities division. The Aussie firm will face competition as the recruitment market heats up for specialist traders with Asian expertise. The bank, which is considering job cuts in Australia, has opened a commodities trading desk in Singapore as part of its plans to expand Asian operations. “We already... Read more
By Simon Mortlock 01 May 2008 - 1 comment
They’ve “pissed off” ANZ boss Mike Smith, and chances are they’ll be top of your hate-list too. Are blood-sucking day traders the trailer-park trash of the finance world? Never one to mince hi ...
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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
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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You’d think UBS would be finding it hard to hang on to people: a first-quarter loss of US$12bn, writedowns of US$19bn and job cuts in Europe – including the chairman himself, Marcel Ospel. The strange thing is, no one seems to want to get out of there. Recruiters, whose inboxes are usually crammed with CVs when institutions show signs of cracking, say the only thing to come out of UBS so... Read more
By Anonymous 14 Apr 2008 - 0 comments
Wholesale redundancies don’t seem to be on the agenda right now for Australia’s major and regional trading banks, or for most of the investment banks. That’s the word from senior recruiters, although the marketplace is still full of downsizing rumours, including one that Bank of America will scale back from a trading bank to a branch office, and that Citigroup will slice into its local headcount. Edmund Gill, director of Hays... Read more
By Tony Kaye 03 Apr 2008 - 0 comments
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
By Anthony O'Brien 26 Mar 2008 - 0 comments