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  • What's in Your Malus Envelope?

    Would you be a banker if most of your pay was at risk for three to five years rather than a maximum of one year? UBS just decided to make itself the test case for overhauling incentive pay. Its ne ...

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  • Very scary bonus developments at UBS

    It looks like UBS has done away with the concept of annual bonuses. The Swiss bank today unveiled details of a new bonus scheme, under which ‘top executives’ will receive (at the very, very most) a third of each year’s bonus at the end of the year in question. The rest will be put aside and only awarded if the bank/employee performs well and behaves nicely in subsequent years. “Should UBS's... Read more

  • Want to leave? Pay back that bonus

    Investment banks are coming up with innovative ways to keep some staff on their payrolls, even while they let go of others in the wake of the credit crunch. This inventiveness mostly takes the form of long-term stock grants, or measures that let banks defer cash expenses in hopes that revenue growth will pick up later on. They may not be popular but, with most banks facing a more... Read more

  • Babcock's bounty

    Managers at Babcock are busy informing their minions how much they'll earn in bonuses this year. It should be (very) good news. The investment bank announced last month that its net profit had jumped 58% in the latest year, to AU$407m, and that its bonus pool had risen an impressive 38.5%, to AU$573m. Based on the bank’s 1,435 headcount at the end of December, the average bonus per employee will be AU$400k,... 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

  • 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

  • Are Oz bankers losing out at bonus time?

    2007 was a good year for Australian bankers, but that doesn’t mean they’re all seeing the fruits of their labours when it comes to bonuses. Australian investment bankers employed by US banks heavily exposed to the sub-prime credit crisis, such as Citigroup, Merrill Lynch and JPMorgan, are expecting bonus cuts of up to 10% this year. Carmichael Fisher consultant Oliver Darkes says bonuses in areas most exposed to the credit crunch in... Read more

  • Buying out bonuses

    Relatively common in 2006 and early 2007, bonus buyouts are now a thing of the past – except, perhaps, for Jeff Herbert-Smith. Long-time Citi-banker Jeff Herbert-Smith quit his home of 19 years for JPMorgan just before Christmas, and only weeks before bonus numbers are announced. A spokesperson at JPMorgan said Herbert-Smith will be responsible for credit and rates and foreign exchange. JPMorgan declined to comment on whether Herbert-Smith garnered a... Read more

  • Mega-bonuses for M&A stars

    Bumper fee income for 2007, fuelled by a swag of huge M&A deals, has led to massive bonuses for some high performers at major investment banks. Industry insiders point to some senior and junior M&A 'stars' snaring million-dollar-plus cash bonuses, with the so-called millionaire’s factory Macquarie Bank said to be the highest payer. The value of new M&A deals in Australia topped US$100bn (AU$111.2bn) for the first time in 2007, fuelled... Read more

  • US banks the better bet

    It’s been a tough year for US i-banks, but headhunters are warning Aussie bankers to stick with the Yanks. Since the start of this year, shares in Merrill Lynch have plummeted more than 40%, Bear Stearns shareholders are growling about the 38% drop in their investment, and Wall Street heavyweights like Citigroup have taken a pasting. On the flip side, Aussie banks look relatively attractive, with shares in Commonwealth Bank up more... Read more

  • Asia’s big bonus swindle

    Asian bankers account for a growing proportion of banks’ profits. But they are still short-changed at bonus time. This year, the situation looks set to be worse than ever. Most US banks have lost packets through the US sub-prime crisis, meaning profitable local bankers are in danger of subsidising their struggling American colleagues. Gary Lai, manager of front-office banking at recruiter Robert Walters Singapore, says Hong Kong and Singapore bankers employed at... Read more

  • The Outsider: Bonus time and the importance of not blinking

    Don’t underplay your achievements, says ex-banker and author David Charters. And don’t high five your boss when your bonus is less derisory than anticipated. It’s that time of year again. Team leaders, senior managing directors and members of the Management Committee are huddling together in glass-walled meeting rooms at the edge of the trading floor, poring over lists of names and numbers. From time to time they pause and look up,... Read more

  • Financial inducements to stay put

    Thinking of finding a new job? Have a little something to take your mind off it. Australia's financial services skills shortage is encouraging banks to offer tasty 'buyback' packages to keep stellar performers who threaten to defect. Anthony Ayers, principal consultant at Sydney-based Chandler, says the most common buybacks (AKA 'counter-offer') involve matching money – but adds they may also encompass anything from offering additional education, an offshore secondment, a promotion... Read more

  • Guaranteed and sign-on bonuses hit Oz

    They're nothing new in the northern hemisphere, but guaranteed bonuses are now available here too. 'Guaranteed bonuses' are when banks commit to paying a specified level of end-of-year bonus, rather than leaving it to your performance or the foibles of the market. From banks' perspective, they're a way of enticing scarce talent to come and work for them. Throwing in a guarantee can also prevent existing staff from leaving to work... Read more

  • Don't go – have some equity!

    With staff turnover in Australia's financial services industry increasing, firms are being forced to offer employees a stake in the business. Many in Australia's financial services industry looked on with envy at the stunning success of the float of fund management group Platinum Asset Management in May. Predictably, those at the top of the pile came off best. The Platinum IPO created a multi-billionaire out of founder Kerr Neilson, whose stake in... Read more

  • From corkscrew perms to rates of return

    One measure of Singapore’s desperation for private banking talent is the sudden popularity of the city’s elite hairdressers. According to one banker in Hong Kong, recruiters at rival outfits have been trawling the city's finest salons in the belief that crimpers used to tending the hair of the rich and famous can easily make the transition to private bankers managing their money. If you're capable of dealing with the tribulations of... Read more

  • Creeping out of credit analysis

    Psst! Those credit analysis skills might get you out of the back office – if you're good. Booming markets and lots of debt mean banks need relationship managers and product specialists. But, says Christine Kwan at recruiter Michael Page, relationship managers and product specialists now need to be able to do credit analysis as well. ''All the banks are recruiting. We've been very busy in this area in the past couple... Read more

  • The mega-money at MacBank

    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

  • Bumper month for banking jobs

    If you're a banker looking for work in Australia, now is the time to be doing it. But accountants should stay put. According to the Olivier Internet Job Index, the number of banking jobs advertised on the net rose 10.3% in the last month – and 43.14% in the last 12 months. This compares to an increase across all sectors of just 1.18% in the last month, and 38.96% in the... Read more

  • Guest comment: M&A bankers don’t deserve their pay

    William D. Cohan, a former managing director at JPMorgan Chase & Co. and former VP at Lazard Frères, explains why M&A bankers don’t merit mega-bucks. The end of the first quarter of 2007 brought the news that global announced M&A deal volume for the three-month period topped US$1.1trillion – making this first quarter the busiest first quarter on record. Not surprisingly, the investment bankers shepherding all these deals are positively giddy,... Read more

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