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  • Plenty of jobs, no candidates

    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

  • Analysts vs. associates

    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

  • 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

  • A matter of over-experience?

    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

  • Aussie bankers choose the easy life

    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

  • Why does Goldman pay so much?

    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

  • Guest comment: How to do the remote interview

    Abigail Stevens, founder and managing director of Think Global Recruitment, says telephone and video conference interviews need not be scary if you know how. We’re all familiar with the formalities of going for a job interview, but how does that change when the role you’re going for is based overseas? Imagine not being in the same room as the interviewer or not being able to shake their hand? Whether you want... Read more

  • Guest comment: Big banks are not always best

    Top banks are all very well, but the so-called 'second tier' also has plenty to offer, says Chris Mead, regional director at Hays Banking in Asia. Given their size, diversity of products and business lines, global office network, extensive training programmes and budgets, top-tier investment banks have plenty in their favour. They usually offer more opportunities for career mobility and they also offer exposure to a more diverse range of banking... Read more

  • I'm an Aussie get me out of here

    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

  • The Insider: When bankers behave badly

    Banking's not for wimps, but neither should you tolerate being bullied, says Hugh Karseras, author and senior banker. Does bullying go on in the City? In my experience, yes, but don't expect to see trading floor managers hurling chairs at hapless underlings. Bullying in the City is often a lot more subtle, a lot harder to evidence and a lot more insidious. It's important to differentiate between someone who is normally... Read more

  • Making it in Melbourne

    Who’s hiring in Victoria? Big banks, according to recruiters. Sadly, the spokeswomen for both Melbourne-based ANZ Bank and National Australia Bank were unwilling to comment on their organisation’s hiring needs for 2008, but recruiters assure us both banks are staffing up in Melbourne during the first quarter of this year. “We have seen a big increase in demand for business development and relationship management staff due to new sales budgets that have... Read more

  • Australia: land of false promise?

    Australia hasn’t lived up to its promise for ANZ’s ex-group managing director, Steve Targett. How common is it for immigrant bankers to come unstuck? In the case of Targett, the stakes are high and getting higher. Last month, he upped his damages claim from AU$2.1m to a hefty AU$57m, according to a report in the Australian Financial Review. Targett, a former banker with Lloyds TSB, claims he left his well-paid job... Read more

  • Guest comment: It’s a man’s world (still)

    Locating senior women in private equity funds, hedge funds or investment banks is as rare as finding zebras in Antarctica, says William D. Cohan. Despite their bright smiles and elegant demeanours, the sorry state of professional women in the highbrow world of private equity was on full display in a two-page photographic spread tucked into the middle of the May 2007 issue of Portfolio, Condé Nast's new business monthly. The magazine... Read more

  • Hitting the beach in Oz may clobber your career

    There's no shortage of bankers eager to make the move to Australia. But is a move to Oz good for your career? Plenty of would-be migrants come from the City of London. Recruitment firm Robert Walters recently advertised a number of Australian-based treasury positions in London's Financial Times and Evening Standard, for example, and received a mass of applications. David Rolleston, associate director in finance at Robert Walters, says it shows London-based... Read more

  • London, New York, Tokyo – and Sydney?

    What's the chance of Sydney becoming a global financial hub and location of choice for the ultra-mobile international banker? Not much, according to one headhunter in the city. Anthony Ayers, principal consultant at Chandler Heath Executive Search, says Australia is unlikely to rival the likes of Hong Kong in the foreseeable future: "Australia's GDP, geography, and remuneration will all hold it back," he predicts. "The country will always be constrained by... Read more

  • From hiring to not-hiring (or even firing)?

    Does chaos in the credit markets spell doomsday for jobs? "It's too soon to tell,'' says James Nicholson, director of recruiter Robert Walters. "Macquarie and BNP Paribas are two of our big clients and there have been no directives changing their hiring strategy. But, if this tumult gets worse, I would expect it to have a big effect.' Edmund Gill at recruiter Hays also says it's too soon to call, but if... Read more

  • Good news – you're being paid in Aussies!

    Australia’s rising dollar has the potential to attract overseas finance professionals. The Aussie reached a 23-year high of US$0.90 last month – up a whopping 86% since 2001. Since the start of 2007 it’s also up around 9% against sterling and 5% against the euro. With the rising dollar making Australian jobs increasingly lucrative for international bankers, anyone would think Sydney might see an influx of people from the City of London,... Read more

  • Moving to Australia? Recruiters’ tips to tackling the market

    A dearth of mid-level professionals amid a general candidate crunch has made Australia even more attractive for northern hemisphere finance professionals seeking more sun, surf and sports. But recruiters say there are some critical factors to consider before you move Down Under. A global candidate shortage has driven the growth of cross-border traffic, with Australia’s talent pool being drained by opportunities offshore in Asia, London and New York. This, combined with... Read more

  • Merrill Lynch latest to build Aus prime brokerage

    Merrill Lynch is building up its new Australian prime brokerage businesses, and has drafted in a honcho from New York to make it happen. Finance Asia says John Laws will run a 40-strong team as the head of Merrill’s business division offering its global debt and equities financing platform in Sydney and Melbourne. The business has an equity and fixed income prime brokerage, stock loan, margin lending, structured financing, financial futures and... Read more

  • Train Oz brains, say recruiters

    Recruiters say the Australian Government needs to put more money into white-collar training to address the chronic shortage in the financial services sector. Australia’s Government has set aside A$837m to spend on additional training measures for unskilled Australians. Recruiters say it's focusing on the wrong area. “Australia does not have a jobs problem, it has a skilled workers problem,” says Grahame Doyle, a senior regional director for recruitment firm Hays. “There needs... Read more

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