‘Ask and you shall have’ is becoming the mantra for banking and finance employees, as major banking groups agree an increasingly broad range of perks in a tight labour market. The extended offer spans everything from hot-desking to home working, but is particularly focused on the requirements of new parents: increased maternity leave and 'baby' incentives – including gift certificates, share options, and straight cash – are all the rage. NAB, ANZ,... Read more
Anonymous 12 Feb 2007 - 0 comments
With banks only recently dishing out big bonuses, the next downturn may be the last thing on your mind. But is this really wise? It wasn’t that long ago that economists were predicting there would be a slip in 2007, and some bankers may be wondering how long the good times will last. The word from recruiters is that if you’re on the debt side of the employment ledger, assessing credit and... Read more
Anonymous 13 Feb 2007 - 0 comments
Eliot Spitzer? Who? In Australia, there may never have been a better time to go into equity research. "The market here is just hugely equities driven," says Edmund Gill, of recruiter Hays. “It hasn’t dipped and as long as China keeps growing, so will we." Morgan Stanley’s Andrew Le Lievre agrees: “We recruit researchers from Australia into Asia, and we recruit Asian researchers into our Australian offices. If we find any good... Read more
Anonymous 14 Feb 2007 - 0 comments
Macquarie Bank, Australia’s biggest recruiter in the banking and financial services sector over the last few years, doesn’t expect to slow down its hiring boom at all in 2007, although it does admit that competition for staff is toughening up. The Sydney-based bank has added another 1,200 staff in the past 10 months, taking its total to 9,400, nearly double the number of just three years ago. Its international numbers have quadrupled... Read more
Anonymous 21 Feb 2007 - 0 comments
Australia’s banks are trying to make new recruits feel at home as quickly as possible, for fear of losing them to homelier rivals. It’s known as ‘onboarding,’ according to Trevor Bradley, regional director of the recruitment firm Chandler Macleod, and is intended to convince new hires they’ve made the right choice. How can you tell if you’re being onboarded? Bradley says the process is all about integrating new employees into an organisation’s... Read more
Anonymous 27 Feb 2007 - 0 comments
Do you want next year’s bonus ahead of time? Hiring banks are said to be increasingly willing to buy out the bonuses of the staff they’re hiring. Given that US banks have only just paid out their bonuses, it may be a little early in the year for US bank employees to have their bonuses bought out for the whole of 2007. But if you work at the likes of Mitsubishi... Read more
Anonymous 28 Feb 2007 - 0 comments
The mining boom in Western Australia has enabled Perth to leap above its eastern state rivals as the home of the highest base salaries for credit analysis in Australia. A survey by recruitment firm Robert Walters shows that the salary range for credit risk analysts in Perth with less than two years' experience is now AU$55k to AU$80k, leapfrogging the traditional leader Sydney (AU$55k to AU$65k) and the other eastern seaboard... Read more
By Giles Parkinson 01 Mar 2007 - 0 comments
Professional women who have chosen to opt out of the workforce to have children have long wished they could ease themselves back into professional ranks through part-time or short-term consultancy work. It seems that employers in the financial services sector are finally coming to the party. Ben Derwent, managing director of recruitment firm Derwent Executive, says banks and accountancy firms, in particular, are looking to bring in people on a short-term... Read more
Anonymous 20 Mar 2007 - 0 comments
Guy Day, managing director for Asia at recruitment firm Ambition, advises how to react if your bonus doesn’t measure up to expectations. The discussion of bonus is an extremely contentious subject. It’s also an emotional one and quite rightly so. The prestige of working in high-profile financial institutions comes at a price – intensive hours, heavy travel schedules, and stress. At the end of a long year, employees look for their... Read more
By Guy Day 22 Mar 2007 - 0 comments
Oz banks are tuning in to the need to woo different generations of staff in different ways. St. George Bank, one of the country’s largest retail banks, is among those pandering to generational idiosyncrasies. It recently unveiled an enhanced set of benefits tailored for its Generation X, Y and Baby Boomer employees. Who got what? For Generation X, said to be those born between 1961 and 1978, there was extended parental leave,... Read more
Anonymous 26 Mar 2007 - 0 comments
Tied in to your existing employer? You’re not alone. A survey conducted by Ernst & Young has found leading employers are opting to defer the payment of short-term incentives such as bonuses in a bid to keep their best executives for longer. The survey found that 40% to 50% of larger companies, including banks and financial services groups, were now likely to defer bonuses – which in the case of leading investment... Read more
Anonymous 27 Mar 2007 - 0 comments
Derivatives jobs in China’s financial markets are set to boom this year, with salaries in Shanghai already matching those in other Far Eastern financial centres. Buoyed by the new interest rate benchmark mechanism and the expected launch of China’s first index futures contract, expertise is likely to be drawn from Hong Kong and Singapore. Dennis Koh, managing partner of Goshen Staines Singapore, an executive search firm, says pay in Shanghai is... Read more
Anonymous 17 Apr 2007 - 0 comments
Fluctuating stockmarkets might be fortuitous for equity strategists, who advise traders on the future direction of the market. But their star – in terms of jobs and pay – hasn’t risen yet. Edmund Gill, executive business director at recruiter Hays, says there is always demand for strategists, and the recent gyrations of global stock markets haven’t made much difference. "Everyone’s looking for direction – there is so much hunger for future... Read more
Anonymous 03 Apr 2007 - 0 comments
Babcock & Brown have taken the art of incentive payments to a new level. Bonus payments for senior executives often reach two thirds of total rewards, or possibly for the occasional individual. In 2006, however, Babcock appears to have established a new benchmark of at least 90% for its senior executives – and recruiters say other employers are taking note. The company’s annual report reveals that all the investment bank's senior... Read more
Anonymous 11 Apr 2007 - 0 comments
London’s calling – and Australians are answering. Walk into any London finance, law or accountancy firm and you’d think you were in Bondi. Research from London-based recruiter Joslin Rowe shows the supply of skilled financial professionals is outstripping demand in London with 10 jobs to every four candidates. It found that 25% of all corporate finance and M&A lawyers in London are Australians or New Zealanders, and says there are 5,000... Read more
Anonymous 18 Apr 2007 - 0 comments
Australian banking executives are retiring in their droves, creating opportunities for younger bankers to fill their shoes. Macquarie Bank, for instance, has lost a clutch of senior types in recent months, including its deputy chairman, its executive chairman and its treasurer. Their exit was partly down to restructuring and partly down to a government decision to remove the limits on superannuation deposits this financial year – making now a good time... Read more
Anonymous 24 Apr 2007 - 0 comments
There’s nothing better than cash in the hand – or at least a big fat bonus. A survey just conducted by Hays found that two thirds of respondents prefer a high cash component in their salaries these days over non-cash benefits. That compares with 42% who said they preferred cash when the survey was last conducted in April 2006. Matthew Gowan, senior manager of Hays Banking, says the candidate shortage has resulted... Read more
Anonymous 01 May 2007 - 0 comments
Will Barclays acquire ABN AMRO or won't it? Even if it does, Australian jobs are likely to be unaffected. ABN AMRO is by far the bigger of the two banks in Australia and New Zealand, with about 700 people on the ground. Barclays, by contrast, has fewer than 100 employees, mainly spread between Sydney and Melbourne. There's little overlap between the two in terms of operations. ABN's primary focus is on corporate... Read more
Anonymous 30 Apr 2007 - 0 comments
Want to work somewhere else? Seems like banks are only too happy to oblige. It's all part of the war (and we're talking brutal hand-to-hand combat here) for Australian finance talent. OK, so Australia is short of financiers, but banks' thinking seems to be that they'd rather put someone out to pasture somewhere else for a few years than see them skip the fence to work for a rival. Erica Burmeister,... Read more
Anonymous 09 May 2007 - 0 comments
Bankers around the globe are apprehensive about losing their jobs. Not in Australia. We asked people visiting our sites to rate their chances of involuntarily losing their job in the next 24 months on a scale ranging from "negligible" through to "very high". Almost half of Aussies polled – 49% – said that their chances of being shown the door before mid-2009 were "low" or "negligible". In Asia, Europe and the... Read more
By eFinancialCareers UK 08 May 2007 - 0 comments