Employees of ABN AMRO’s Australian operations have become part owners of the company. ABN AMRO’s Australian staff are set to buy out 25% of the equity in the local business, according to The Australian. The paper says all staff at the bank have received a share of equity, with each receiving $1,000 of shares per year of service and senior staff having the option to buy more. ABN’s Australian operation is following in... Read more
Anonymous 02 Aug 2006 - 0 comments
Westpac Financial Planning is looking to hire an unspecified number of financial advisers, in anticipation of increased demand for professional advice, reports MoneyManagement.com. Westpac expects demand for their services to increase as a result of the superannuation changes handed down in the 2006 Federal Budget. Alongside technical skills, the company is reportedly in search of people who fit with company’s values of teamwork, integrity, and achievement.
Anonymous 03 Aug 2006 - 0 comments
The number of people planning to leave England has doubled in the past three years, and Australia is high on their list. The number of people planning to leave England has doubled in the past three years, and Australia is high on their list. 13 per cent of Brits surveyed by research company ICM said they wanted to leave “in the near future”, up from 7 per cent in 2003, and a... Read more
By Tessa Liburd 10 Aug 2006 - 0 comments
With booming conditions globally, is an MBA still required to get to the top of the pile? Richard Lyons, from executive search firm Carr Lyons, says that MBAs are more valuable at the associate level than at the assistant-director of VP level. At the associate level an MBA from a good university will separate people from the crowd. At the higher end, employers are looking more for solid experience in their... Read more
Anonymous 17 Aug 2006 - 0 comments
Paul Masi, as Merrill Lynch’s new chief executive officer and country head for its Australian operations, shares striking similarities to his counterpart at UBS. Announced Wednesday, Masi’s appointment is effective immediately, following Kevin Skelton stepping down from the role. Having joined Merrill Lynch in Australia in 2000, Masi was previously country co-head and head of Australasian equities before relocating to Hong Kong in 2003 to become head of Asia Pacific region equity... Read more
By Neil Bishop 31 Aug 2006 - 0 comments
Summer is fast approaching, but if you're an accountant working in an investment bank now may be a good time to head to an increasingly chilly London or New York City. Research by recruitment firm Robert Walters shows City of London accountants can earn over 90% more than their counterparts in banks in Sydney. Marketing director Steven Edwards attributed high London pay to a shortage of skilled accountants in the City: “There... Read more
By Ian Brown 04 Sep 2006 - 0 comments
When the going gets tough, wannabe bankers start showing their moves. Over the past few weeks the global financial community has been following one UBS candidate’s innovative approach to nabbing a job. His was no ordinary application – it featured an 11 page CV and a sharply edited video featuring him ballroom dancing, breaking bricks with his bare hands. Observers are treated to nuggets of wisdom like ‘To achieve success you... Read more
Anonymous 23 Oct 2006 - 0 comments
Sarah Butcher, Editor of eFinancialCareers, on why over-egging your attributes in the recruitment game will do more harm than good. There are few things less appealing than a man with generously gelled hair perspiring heavily. One is the same man subjecting you to a seven-minute monologue about how exceptional he is. Both points appear to have escaped the attention of Aleksy Vayner. The 23-year-old has become a laughing stock ever since... Read more
By Sarah Butcher 24 Oct 2006 - 0 comments
Bankers on Wall Street and in the City of London are expecting bumper bonuses this year. How does the Sydney market compare? Quite well, seems to be the answer. Australia may have a market cap of just US$854bn – 20 times smaller than the US, but our research suggests financial services salaries in the market punch above their weight. According to the office of New York State Comptroller, Alan Hevesi, finance... Read more
By Jo Studdert 03 Nov 2006 - 0 comments
Australia’s banks have been quietly trying to hire more women, but the industry is still a bastion of masculinity. “We have some employers who are still concerned that their executive ranks remain something of a boys club,” says Matthew Gowan, a Melbourne-based specialist in banking at recruitment group Hays. “They say if they have male and female candidates of the same quality, then they may pick the female to balance things... Read more
By eFinancialCareers Australia 08 Nov 2006 - 0 comments
Frustrated with the unreliability of so-called ‘Generation Y’ employees, Australia's accounting firms and are said to be briefing recruiters to supply only baby boomer candidates aged 55 years or more. Jason Cartwright, general manager of client services at Melbourne-based Link Recruitment, reports his firm has been briefed by four accounting practices over the last few months, seeking only older employees. Cartwright says the firms have found that younger employees are hard to... Read more
Anonymous 13 Nov 2006 - 0 comments
There are 18 much richer Australians this week, and it’s not down to a lottery win. Goldman Sachs JBWere has promoted18 people to become Australian managing directors (MDs) - nearly doubling the 22 it had. Rumour has it they’ll each be on at least US$1.5m (AU$2.0m). What's going on? Craig Drummond, Chief Operating Officer at Goldman Sachs JBWere Sydney says the appointments "reflect the depth of talent and the significant contribution... Read more
By Jo Studdert 23 Nov 2006 - 0 comments
Michael Markiewicz, managing director of Australian search firm Carmichael Fisher, on why Australian bankers just can’t resist moving west. As financial centres, Sydney and Melbourne may not be on a par with London or New York, but their status is rising. Australia is benefiting from its geographical closeness to Asia and from the likes of the AU$15.5bn Telstra share sale bonanza. However, while Sydney’s financial star rises, some of Australia’s best... Read more
By Michael Marciewitz 27 Nov 2006 - 0 comments
Investment banks aren’t best known as cuddly employers. But when it comes to flexible working arrangements, even high-powered financiers are getting more leeway these days. Take UBS for example, which offers its employees a whole range of flexible alternatives, from the ability to work from home on some days, to staggered hour arrangements, job sharing, and part-time options. Mike Davies, UBS’s head of human resources, says workers at all levels are... Read more
Anonymous 06 Dec 2006 - 0 comments
Banking has traditionally been an industry in which people retire young. But an early exit is increasingly out of reach, says Nick Deligiannis, senior regional director of Hays Banking. Ask people if they are looking forward to retiring and you usually receive an overwhelming and unwavering response of ‘Yes.’ Yet ask people when they expect to retire and the response is not so certain. We recently asked over 1,300 professionals from... Read more
By Nick Deligiannis 07 Dec 2006 - 0 comments
Accountants, mythically dull, are becoming banks’ target de jour. They are numerate, literate and highly educated, used to working in teams and focusing on the client. Perfect. Or so it may seem if you’re an accountant hoping to lay your hands on a juicy client-facing role in the front office. But the bad news is that investment banks aren’t magically transforming accountants into derivatives traders: they’re using them as accountants. Recruiters... Read more
Anonymous 05 Dec 2006 - 0 comments
What if you're not satisfied when you get your bonus? Could you negotiate for more? Success is rare, and it could be a dangerous path to pursue. “In 20 years at Goldman, I never once saw anyone renegotiate their bonus after it had been announced, ever,” says one ex-head of department at the bank, which is paying US$16bn in bonuses this year. “Bonuses are decided in October and it’s not done... Read more
By Sarah Butcher 14 Dec 2006 - 0 comments
Have visa, will travel. The US has emerged as yet another destination for travel-hungry Australian finance professionals, adding to the talent shortage that is plaguing the country in the accounting and financial markets. The signing last year of the Australia-US Free Trade Agreement means that young Australian professionals no longer need to enter the green card lottery to gain visas to the US. Instead, the E-3 visa programme has been expanded... Read more
Anonymous 09 Jan 2007 - 0 comments
Get your kicks from helping organisations manage risk? It's your lucky day: demand for internal auditors is going through the roof. “It’s a very buoyant market,” says Gavin Houchell, managing director of Ambition Finance. Companies that were previously prepared to outsource internal auditing functions are now looking to bring them in-house – and adding staff as a result. Ambition estimates salaries for internal auditors have jumped 15% in the past year.... Read more
Anonymous 19 Dec 2006 - 0 comments
ANZ Bank is about to embark on a major hiring program to support its expansion into Asia. Other banks are expected to follow close on its heels. ANZ CEO John McFarlane is behind the new push into Asia, and said that in the New Year the bank will launch a recruitment drive aimed at the postgraduate market. “We’re looking to recruit a substantial number of graduates with Asian language skills or... Read more
Anonymous 18 Dec 2006 - 0 comments