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Ex-Goldman, Barclays and Lloyds MD has just jumped to a fintech firm after 30 years in banking

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Adam Barrett, the head of institutional sales at Lloyd Banking Group has joined the exodus from banking to fintech. After more than 30 years in investment banking, at UBS, Goldman Sachs and Barclays, he’s just gone to peer to peer lending platform Invest & Fund.

Barrett left Lloyds in April, where he’d worked for four and a half years after joining from hedge fund Cairn Capital, where he worked as a consultant. Barrett has held some big sales jobs at investment banks across the City over the past 30 years, including head of sales for Northern Europe at Barclays investment bank for over eight years from 2003, and a managing director in derivative sales at Goldman Sachs, where he worked for close to five years.

He’s joining Invest & Fund as head of institutional lender origination, a role that taps into his expertise selling to financial institutions. Fintech firms are desperate for access to large institutional financial services organisations, and the right sales person with a background working for these firms can open doors to new clients.

Invest & Lend was set up in 2013 by Royal Bank of Scotland’s former head of gilt trading, David Turner, and Mike Hawkins, who was a consultant at KPMG. It has around 25 employees in London and Hastings.

Barrett was originally brought in to head up a newly merged rates and credit sales business at Lloyds Banking Group. Lloyds has been losing some senior sales staff this year including Glen Manning, a managing director within its mid-markets sales team who left for Rothschild in February. It also brought in Adrian Walkling as head of financial institutions sales in January from Silicon Valley firm Medallia.

It’s also been hiring for trading roles, having brought in John Keane, a former credit trader at RBS who worked at independent boutique Chalkhill Partners for the past two years as a senior trader earlier this month.

Contact for news, tips and comments: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Image: Getty Images

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Citi analyst confirms the best route into private equity in 2017

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If you’re looking for a path into a London private equity job in 2017, there is one track that has been very well beaten: the heavily-stomped route into the private equity arms of Canadian pension funds.

Based upon our own observations, three large Canadian pension funds (the Canadian Pension Plan, PSP Investments – the private debt fund of Canada’s Public Sector Pension Investment Board, and the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ) have hired around 20 junior people in London so far this year. That might not sound much, but these are private equity funds and private equity funds are small. 

Most importantly, the hiring continues. If you haven’t joined a Canadian private equity fund yet, you may still get a chance to do so.

The latest migrant is Antoine Bleton, a former analyst at Citi in London. Bleton joined the private equity team at Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ) earlier this month. Previously, he spent around three years at Citigroup, two of which were in the industrials investment banking team.

Bleton isn’t the only 20-something to join the Canadians in London of late. Anthony Tran from Deutsche Asset Management went to PSP Investments in July. Meg Mookroi Uthayophas joined CPP Investment Board from Terra Firma earlier this month. Udaibir Banga joined CPP after doing a Harvard MBA in August.

A few weeks ago, Bloomberg suggested that private equity funds are competing more aggressively than ever for banks’ top junior staff. Funds which used to hire from the second year of banks’ analyst programs, are now pursuing first year analysts in January after they were hired in August, said Bloomberg. On this basis, the Canadian funds still hiring at this time look a bit late. But it’s nice to know there are offers still on the table.


Have a story or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

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Ex-BNP Paribas prop traders have just left their senior roles at Caxton Associates

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Macro hedge fund Caxton Associates might be hiring on the back of a stellar year where its London partners earned an average of £3.7m, but senior staff are still departing.

Jean-Luc Alexandre, the former head of emerging markets prop trading at BNP Paribas who joined Caxton Associates as a portfolio manager on its emerging markets and macro desk, is said to have left in August. Philippe Fourcade, who was also a prop trader on BNP’s EM desk and joined Caxton with Alexandre when the bank shuttered its prop trading business in 2014, has left as well.

Meanwhile, Michel Kikano, an associate partner and commodities portfolio manager at the firm who has worked there for the past seven years, departed in August. Kikano joined from Brevan Howard Asset Management in 2010, and has also worked at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

The exits follow Greg Knight, the former head of leveraged FX finance at Deutsche Bank who joined Caxton in 2012. He left in June and has yet to turn up elsewhere. Josh Berkowitz, another star trader at Caxton who joined in 2014, also departed earlier this year.

Caxton has stood out as one of the few macro hedge funds continuing to hire in London as its competitors cut back. In March, it took on James ter Haar and GJ Prasad, both portfolio managers at Millennium Capital Management and has taken on nine people so far this year. It made £97.7m in profits for its London operation – up a massive 504% on the previous year.

Both Alexandre and Fourcade’s departure may have less to do with Caxton retrenching and more due to the hotness of their expertise. Investment banks have been building their emerging markets teams this year, and have been poaching from both their peers and from hedge funds.

Contact for news, tips and comments: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Image: Getty Images

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London Uber ban: bankers react

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Something very bad has happened: Uber has been banned in London. A generation of bankers who got used to having cheap rides in, out, or after work are going to have to make do with black cabs or… Addison Lee.

If you listen closely, you can hear the squeaks of apprehension.

“There were some audible gasps on my team this morning when we found out,” says an analyst at Citi.

“Uber was HUGE in the City,” agrees a managing director at one international bank. “All the Americans who come over here are going to be lost without it.”

“I use Uber big time,” says a vice president (VP) at J.P. Morgan. “This is going to be a problem for sure, especially in my private life.”

Some banks (eg. Bank of America) made Uber official transport providers – meaning employees travelling home after late nights in the office could bill the bank for the journey. Others (eg. J.P. Morgan, Nomura) are understood to have stuck with long established brands and black cabs. BAML employees are going to have revert to the old ways.

“Policies across the City generally insist on using licensed black cabs,” says a VP at a boutique M&A firm. “Uber is not recommended due to uncertainty over insurance coverage and/or certainty around confidentiality. All the places I know state that corporate usage of Uber is done so at own personal risk.”

Most bankers say it’s their social life that will suffer: “On the rare night I go out, this is going to make it harder to get home,” says one representative specimen at associate level. “With the hours that a lot of us work in this industry, we value our free time quite heavily,” says the Citi analyst. “Uber allowed us to travel comfortably and quickly at an affordable price and eliminated the hassle of public transport and lack of signal on the underground. It’s going to be a huge shame to see it go!”

“It just got a lot more expensive to get out of Canary Wharf,” said another VP from BofA. “Unless you’re an executive, in which case you’ll have an S-Class waiting and this will make no difference at all.”

Of course, there’s always the night bus.


Have a story or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

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Photo credit: Disgusted Baby by Rachael Towne is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

Credit Suisse adds Deutsche MD to bolster energy equity research

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Credit Suisse is revamping its investment banking division globally, promoting from within and moving senior executives into new roles, as well as bringing in new talent from rivals.

The Swiss bank’s latest hire is Kristina Kazarian, most recently a managing director and the head of the U.S. midstream energy, master limited partnerships (MLPs) and natural gas equity research team at Deutsche Bank, where she worked for three years.

Now Kazarian has taken on a similar role at Credit Suisse in New York: MD and the head of the equity research team covering U.S. midstream energy, MLPs and the independent refining sectors.

Prior to joining Deutsche Bank, Kazarian worked at Fidelity Investments, where she covered a range of U.S. energy verticals over close to a decade. She has a BA from Wellesley College and an MBA from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.

This is just one of many moves that Credit Suisse has been making lately.

Credit Suisse has appointed Mathew Cestar and Jens Welter as the new co-heads of investment banking and capital markets in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

In addition, Marisa Drew and Mark Echlin, who previously led the business in EMEA, have switched roles. Drew will lead a new impact advisory and finance department, while Echlin will chair the U.K. investment banking and capital markets business. Also, Henrik Aslaksen, who joined Credit Suisse last year after ascending to MD and the global head of M&A at Deutsche Bank, was named the executive chairman of that unit.

Last month, Credit Suisse made a couple of big hires for its equities business, who are both based in New York: Michael Ebert, who joined from Bank of America Merrill as global head of equity derivatives, and Mike Stewart, who came over from UBS as the new global head of equities. The latter worked for BAML, where the two worked together, before Stewart joined UBS in 2011.

On the other hand, Credit Suisse is inevitably losing people to rivals as well.

Standard Chartered just hired Savady Yem, the former head of fixed income sales for Asia at Credit Suisse, as the global head of private credit sales in Singapore.

In addition, Nas Al-khudairi, who was promoted less than two years ago to become the head of electronic products, left Credit Suisse, reportedly for a position at Barclays.

Photo credit: Grafissimo/GettyImages
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A tough message for young bankers: You’re just cannon fodder

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If you’ve left university and achieved a job at a top investment bank, you obviously know how to jump through hoops. You clearly got some good grades, went to some kind of big university, did all the right things. You probably feel like you’re special. But what if you’re not? What if you’re just an over-confident Millennial who’s passing through?

I don’t want to burst your bubble, but if you’re an analyst in an investment bank, you’re cannon-fodder. You’re there to do the crappy jobs that will soon be automated away anyway.  Sure, they’ll tell you you’re special, you’re the future etc. But open your eyes: they’ll bring in a whole new set of people just like you in a year’s time. By that point around 33% of your class will probably have left – voluntarily or otherwise.

Feeling less confident yet? Good. Because there’s nothing worse than a first year analyst who’s full of it. If that’s you, you’re a huge accident waiting to happen.

If you’re going to get ahead in this industry, you need to spend your years as a baby banker being detail-oriented, totally reliable and totally committed. You don’t know anything: you need to be ready to learn about this industry. You need to be professional and you need to be accepting of the fact that to begin with you’re unlikely to see much of the top people whose cost per hour is huge and who don’t expect you to last long anyway.

You need to prove yourself. You can’t come into banking thinking you’re special. You’re not: you’re as replaceable as they come.

Survival is all about patience and diligence. The big bankers will only start giving you better work when they start trusting you. – When they can see that you’ve been involved in transactions and haven’t made mistakes. You want big money and big responsibility? You’re going have to work your ass up the ladder.

Maybe you didn’t expect this? Maybe you thought you’d get to see some clients sooner. Think for a moment though: why would a junior like you be unleashed on a client who’s paying $10m in fees? The risk is too big. Clients aren’t there for you to practice on.

So, learn some humility. Learn how to work efficiently under incredibly stressed conditions. Learn everything you can about financial modelling and Excel. Become an expert in fault-free pitch-books. If you’re in capital markets, learn about financial instruments and funding vehicles – how do they work, when are they used?

Most of all, and for all banks’ talk about giving juniors time off, accept that a client might call on a Saturday morning asking for a $1bn deal to be executed on the Monday open. You want to work 40 hours a week? Clients don’t care about your working hours. They pay. They want it and they need it. Forget your holidays; forget your weekend. That deal will make the bank $$$$ – and you too. And if you’re not totally reliable when a top client needs the bank? Then you are history – you just don’t know it yet.

Philippe Ersatz is the pseudonym of a senior equity capital markets banker, now retired


Have a story or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

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Morning Coffee: Ex-Goldman analyst gives horrified ex-colleagues plenty to discuss. Lev fin jobs back in a big way

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Maybe Goldman Sachs bankers should be used to it. Although CEO Lloyd Blankfein rails against President Trump on Twitter, some former staff are less averse to the lure of contemporary right wing politics. – The Trump administration is famously littered with ex-Goldmanites, and Steve Bannon, ex-Goldman M&A VP and lead anti-globalization agitator was until recently Trump’s chief strategist. Now, an ex-Goldman economist has stolen Bannon’s mantle: for the moment, Alice Weidel is the most famous, most right-wing, ex-Goldman Sachs employee on the planet.

Weidel and her political colleague, Alexander Gauland, just won a 13% share of the vote for anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party in Germany’s election. – Not enough to unseat Chancellor Angela Merkel, but enough to force Merkel into a new and potentially unstable coalition, enough to cause disquiet at the return of right wing politics to the German mainstream, and enough to raise eyebrows at Weidel’s former employer.

As the Financial Times points out, this is the first time that Germany has had a mainstream right-wing political party since the Nazis. Weidel’s message to the German electorate was that they needed to vote for her to “get their country back,” that they should put Germany first so they could still call it their home, and that the culture of Germany had changed since Angela Merkel’s admission of 900,000 migrants and refugees from mostly Muslim countries, so that as a lesbian woman she felt less comfortable showing affection in public.

While Goldman’s famously open-minded staff would undoubtedly approve of Weidel’s call for tolerance of homosexuality, they’d likely be less approving of the other elements of Weidel’s message. – All the more so because of their potential to inflame ugly sentiments from the past. At an AfD rally attended by the New York Times, for example, there were complaints that Germans now have the “mentality of a totally vanquished people” and questions over the need for a Holocaust memorial.

In fact, Weidel’s tenure at Goldman seems to have been brief. In an article earlier this year, Spiegel said she only worked for the firm for two years after leaving university. Even so, she seems to have created sufficient of an impression for former colleagues to talk about her in shocked tones. Four months ago, Spiegel says ex-Goldman colleagues were sharing videos of Weidel’s public appearances accompanied by stunned comments like, “Here is Alice. What happened to her?,” and, “Who is the real Alice?”

As of yesterday, Weidel’s former friends at Goldman will have even more to talk about. – All the more so because her success injects an element of uncertainty into German politics which might make the firm think twice before shifting thousands of jobs from London to Frankfurt at the earliest possible opportunity.

Separately, leveraged finance jobs are back and they’re bigger than ever. The Wall Street Journal notes that the volume of U.S. leveraged loans is up 53% this year, putting the U.S. market on track to surpass its record of 2007. It also notes that this previous record was one of the main signs of the impending crash and that investors in leveraged loans in 2007 suffered losses of 30%.

Meanwhile:

Weidel lived abroad in China for six years as a banker and speaks Chinese. (Haaretz) 

J.P. Morgan’s creating 2,500 new back and middle office jobs in Poland. (Financial Times) 

Top technology workers would rather work in Canada than Trump’s America. (Vanity Fair) 

Dataminr’s opening a Dublin office. (Irish Times) 

Men in Silicon Valley are starting a radical subculture calling for total male separatism.  (NY Times) 

Self-made trader who claimed to be very, very, rich actually isn’t. (Daily Mail) 

You’ll feel better if your job title is ‘chief fabricator of fairy dust.” (BBC) 

Everyone’s only pretending to understand Blockchain. (Finextra) 

Flying makes you stupid. (BBC) 

If you say things like “I think”, or “my view is”, combined with causal words such as “because”, “so”, “nevertheless” in a job interview, you’re more likely to get hired. (Financial Times) 

Goldman bankers keep quitting for Sotheby’s. (Bloomberg) 


Have a story or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

 

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Credit Suisse just hired an MD who was last seen at Haitong

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Something seems to be afoot at Credit Suisse. Last week, the Swiss bank quietly parted company with Warwick Palmer, its head of G10 EM/FX spot trading who only worked there 12 months. Now, it’s hired in a new senior emerging markets trader who spent a long time at Deutsche Bank but had the misfortune to join Haitong Securities just before it decided to slim down. 

Credit Suisse’s new trader is Jamil Hallak, a former managing director of emerging markets trading at Haitong Securities in London. As we reported last week, Haitong has cut its headcount by 67% and Hallak – who only worked there seven months – left in April. Before Haitong, Hallak spent five and a half years at Deutsche Bank in Dubai. Credit Suisse has clearly picked him up at a competitive rate late in the season – there’ll be no bonuses to buyout given that he’s been out of the market since the start of the second quarter.

Credit Suisse’s changes to its emerging markets business come amidst concerns that rising interest rates and proposals to reverse quantitative easing could reduce investor appetite for emerging market debt as yields rise elsewhere. Although Goldman Sachs, BNP Paribas, Jefferies, and Nomura have all been adding staff to their emerging markets businesses this year, banking intelligence firm Coalition said emerging markets macro trading revenues fell 2% across the market in the first half of this year compared to the same period of 2016.

There are signs that Credit Suisse is trying to put its global markets house in order as we go into the fourth quarter. Palmer isn’t the only exit this month: Jim Buccola, the former global head of Credit Suisse’s huge securitized products trading business also left, and was replaced by Joe Steffa, a trader hired from RBS in 2013.


Have a story or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

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Photo credit: creditsuisse_DSC_0031 by Herve Boinay is licensed under CC BY 2.0.


This top Morgan Stanley portfolio manager has just joined this $4bn hedge fund in New York

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Morgan Stanley’s head of sovereign research in New York, Jens Nystedt, has left the Wall Street firm to return to the hedge fund world.

Nystedt joined Morgan Stanley’s investment management division in 2014 as a senior portfolio manager and head of sovereign research. For seven years before joining Morgan Stanley, he had worked in senior research roles at both Moore Capital Management in New York and as a senior macro strategists at GLG Partners in London. Earlier this month, he signed up to Emso Asset Management – an emerging markets focused hedge fund with around $4bn in assets under management and 25 employees across London and New York – as a senior portfolio manager.

Nystedt, who has a PhD in Economics from the Stockholm School of Economics, has flitted between the sell-side and buy-side during his career. He spent over three years at Deutsche Bank, initially as chief economist for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) in London and later as chief US FX strategist in New York. He joined Deutsche in 2004, after six years working as an economist for the International Monetary Fund.

Emso was set up by Mark Franklin, the former co-head of global emerging markets sales and trading at Salomon Smith Barney. It has madea few hires this year – as well as Nystedt, it brought in Johan Larsson as head of European origination from Och-Ziff Capital Management in January.

Contact for news, tips and comments: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Image: Getty Images

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The new (cheap) universities for getting into J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs

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If you want a job at a top investment bank in Europe, you’re probably thinking about attending one of the continent’s top universities for careers in finance – most of which seem to be located in the UK and will therefore cost you £9.3k (€11k, $12.5k) a year as an undergraduate if you’re an EU student, and £10k a year if you’re not.

But maybe you’re missing a trick? Imagine if you could land a banking job by attending a university which only costs €2k (or less) a year and which feeds students into banks’ hottest new hiring market?

Welcome to the top universities in Poland.

As we’ve noted before, Goldman Sachs is building out its technology and operations centre in Warsaw and is expected to make hundreds of new hires both in the front and back office in the next few years. It now transpires that J.P. Morgan has much the same idea. The Financial Times reports that J.P. Morgan plans to create 2,500 new middle and back office roles in Warsaw after opening a new global operations centre in the Polish Capital.

If you want to work in banking, Warsaw’s three top universities – The University of Warsaw, the Warsaw University of Technology and the Warsaw School of Economics – therefore look like a very good bet. All three already feed students into top banks. All three run key courses (eg. computer science, finance and international investment, and quantitative finance) in English. And all three are very, very cheap. 

For the moment, Citi is by far the biggest employer of graduates from Warsaw’s universities: many go into Citi’s big retail banking operation in Poland. However, as the chart below shows, the Swiss banks and Goldman Sachs are also in the market and J.P. Morgan is likely to soon join them. LinkedIn data suggests that between 84% and 87% of graduates from Warsaw’s universities who work in investment banks stay in Poland, although some students from the Warsaw School of Economics also find their way into front office jobs in sales and trading in London.

If you want to work in risk, or operations or technology – or even data-related quantitative finance jobs related directly to sales and trading – in Europe, Warsaw looks like the future. The FT says there are already 50,000 people working for international banks in Poland, and the country is gunning for 30,000 more after Brexit.  In the past, ambitious students who graduated from bachelors degrees at Polish universities came to London to take Masters programmes and get jobs in the City. In future, UK students might simply study in Poland from the outset.


Have a story or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

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Photo credit: Warsaw University by Fox Wu is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

KKR’s ex-head of private credit: Don’t go into private equity for the glamour

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Erik Falk came over to the buy side late in his career. After spending over 16 years working in senior roles at both Credit Suisse and Deutsche Bank, he joined private equity giant KKR in 2008 and eventually became its global head of private credit. Most people make the switch as analysts or associates, but if you’re thinking of moving to the buy-side, do it for the right reasons – not the “glamour,” he says.

Whether you’re looking to move into private equity or private credit or anywhere else on the buy side, Falk suggests that you ask yourself, “Do I really love the idea of investing and the day-to-day reality of doing that type of work?”

“If you really love doing it and find opportunities to join people who will allow you to do it, great, but some people come to the business for the perceived glamour,” he says.

“I don’t believe that is the case for everyone, but assuming it is, it’s about finding people you want to work with, getting in at the ground level and really learning,” Falk says.

Erik Falk recently retired from his role overseeing private funds as head of private credit within the $35bn credit business at KKR. He’s now a senior executive and partner focused on strategic initiatives at Magnetar Capital, a $13bn alternative asset management firm with various fixed income, energy, quantitative and fundamental units, including both private equity and hedge fund strategies. After accepting his new, full-time role at Magnetar in Evanston, Illinois, Falk signed on to become a strategic personal investor and senior advisory board member at Star Mountain Capital, a New York-based investment management firm led by CEO Brett Hickey specializing in U.S. lower middle-market private debt.

Before switching into private equity, he was the head of special situations and co-head of securitized products at Deutsche Bank, which he joined in March 2000 from Credit Suisse First Boston.

The offices of KKR and Star Mountain are only a few blocks apart in New York, but other than that, they are on opposite ends of the spectrum.

“The benefits of being at larger firms, whether it’s an investment bank or a larger private equity firm, relates to the breadth of experience, the depths of the talent pool around you, the resume you build and the types of experience you have,” says Brian Finn, the chairman of Star Mountain, previously the head of the $100bn Credit Suisse Alternatives division, eventually becoming the co-head of the M&A group and co-president of the bank.

Finn went on to become chairman/CEO of Asset Management Finance (AMF) Corp., a $75bn private equity and debt firm that acquires stakes in asset management and wealth management firms, and a strategic adviser to KKR.

“Smaller firms tend to be more entrepreneurial – they don’t have the same sets of rules and constraints as there are at a big firm, where if you’re doing health care, you stay in your lane, whereas at a small firm you can be working on healthcare one day, financial services the next day, equity one day and credit the next day,” Finn says. “At big firms, somebody runs the kitchen, but at small firms you have to make your own coffee.”


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Point72’s chief technology officer swaps one billionaire boss for another

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Point72 Asset Management has just lost its chief technology officer, Chris Corrado, who has worked at the company for the best part of 16 years.

Corrado, who was co-chief technology officer at SAC Capital Advisors before moving across to Steve Cohen’s rebranded family office Point72 Asset Management as chief technology officer in 2014, has just swapped one billionaire boss for another – joining MacAndrews & Forbes, the diverse holding company owned by Ronald Perelman, as chief information officer.

Corrado joined MacAndrews & Forbes earlier this month, having started SAC Capital in January 2001. He was initially a managing director and co-chief technology officer alongside Seetharam Gorre, who moved into the chief information officer role at Point72 in April 2014 – when Corrado became CTO.

While the CIO tends to oversee development and software choices within financial institutions, the CTO is more concerned with infrastructure and technology efficiency. Corrado claims on his LinkedIn profile that he reduced “technology operating costs by 35%”.

Technology has become increasingly important at Point72. As we reported in August, it brought in Jerrell Watts, the former head of algorithmic execution and order routing at Citadel as its new head of algo trading. Matthew Granade, its recently installed chief intelligence officer, said earlier this year that the move towards a ‘quantamental’ approach – blending systematic investing with human decision-making – meant that all new analyst hires were put through a computer programming and data science training programme.

Contact for news, tips and comments: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Image: Getty Images

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Banking vs. consulting. – Which is really best now?

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Investment banking and strategy consulting are like avocados and quinoa: both attract the elite (or, in the words of one ex-McKinsey director, “insecure, deeply left-brain, hyper-intellectual, OCD over-achievers.”). Both pay well. Both involve some serious commitments of your time and some heavy academic achievements.

This is not to say that banking and consulting are equivalent careers though. Like avocados and quinoa, they have some pretty substantial differences. What works for one person will not work for the other.

So… which is right for you? We asked a large population of people with experience of working for Goldman and McKinsey, or J.P. Morgan and Bain & Co. for their opinions on the differences between the two industries. These – plus some quantitative information – are listed below.

Are you a banker or a consultant? All will become clear.

You want higher pay? Choose banking (for the first 20 years)

If you want money, you probably want to work in banking. As the figures below from pay benchmarking company Emolument.com are to be believed, front office banking careers are generally a lot more lucrative than careers in consulting.

A note of caution, though. One ex-McKinsey consultant who now works in investment banking says the figures above are a simplification. If you play a long game in consulting, he tells us you’re likely to come out on top of the bankers. Bankers are paid more at the start of their careers, “But once you reach MD-level in an investment bank, compensation starts to plateau,” he tells us. “In banking, you can be subject to volatility, both from the market and personal performance. Meanwhile, consultants are on a consistent trend upwards.”

While the pay in banking is plateauing, he says compensation at places like McKinsey only really kicks in at the senior partner level. He also says that if you look at the median compensation of consultants with 15 years’ experience versus that of bankers at the same level, consultants will come out on top.

You want job security? Choose consulting

This brings us to the second point: job security. Your chances of having a 15-20 year career in consulting look a lot higher than your chances of having a 15-20 year career in banking.

Take McKinsey & Co. Between 1994 and 2001, it went from 3,300 consultants globally to 7,700. Right now, it has around 12,000 consultants – along with 2,000 “research and information professionals”. In other words, headcount in consulting just seems to rise and rise. – Although firms like McKinsey and Boston Consulting advocate layoffs and restructuring at client companies, their own staff seem fairly secure.

By comparison, all banks are under pressure to cut costs and heads. In the five years following 2008, American banks and insurers slashed 400,000 jobs according to the U.S. census.

Banking therefore looks like the more risky career option – you might get paid more to start with, but it might not last.

You want weekends off? Choose consulting 

Everyone we spoke to (literally everyone) agreed that consultants generally have a better life than bankers.

“My life is unimaginably better as a consultant,” says one ex-M&A banker. “My current colleagues are always listening in horror and shock when I recount some of my long months on less than a handful of hours of sleep when I was in M&A. Leaving at 11pm is really late in most cases in consulting.”

The really big difference, though is weekends: “Most consulting firms treat the weekend as sacred and it’s relatively rare to get an e-mail from a partner or a client.,” he says.

This isn’t to say that the hours aren’t sometimes tough in consulting too. One consultant said weekend work is often needed just to catch up. And even when consultants don’t work weekends, they spend their weeks ‘on the road’ (see below), miles away from home. An ex-consultant we spoke to said weeknights are often a killer in consulting jobs – you’re lucky to get in by 10pm.

Like banks, consultancy firms are alert to the long-hours issue. Boston Consulting Group has been implementing a policy known as ‘Predictable Time Off’ for years. Under it, consultants at the firm are assigned ‘predictable periods’ of downtime at the start of a project. During these periods, BCG consultants are required to be off completely – they mustn’t check their email and they mustn’t check their voicemail. Meanwhile, McKinsey & Co introduced flexible work programmes a few years ago – employees there can now take blocks of unpaid leave between projects, work three or four days a week, or take a leave of absence for up to a year.

You want less travel? Choose banking (for the first 10 years)

Everyone agrees that the big downer about consulting is the travel. If you work in banking you’ll commute in and out of your office on Wall Street, in New Jersey, or in the City of London every day. Yes, you might have to do a lot of travelling if you’re in a senior client-facing position, but if you’re a junior M&A banker or a trader you’ll mostly be glued to your screen at the mother-ship.

By comparison, if you work in consulting the travel is immediate. And it’s relentless. The ‘McKinsey Client Model’ involves, ‘Monday to Thursday at the client site and Fridays in your home office,” according to one McKinsey employee.  That client office could be nearby, or it could be hundreds of miles away. If it’s hundreds of miles away, you’ll spend your weeknights in some kind of faceless hotel. “The travel is a killer – you’re on the road non-stop unless you get a plush home city assignment,” says one ex-McKinsey consultant who now works in banking.

You want interesting work? Choose…consulting

Junior bankers in IBD spend their lives creating financial models in Excel and pitch books in Powerpoint. Consultants, meanwhile, spend their time creating diagrammatic models and Powerpoint presentations. Junior bankers devote their time to studying the value of a company and its capital structure; junior consultants think about the strategy of a company and its organizational structure.

Junior M&A bankers who’ve gone into consulting say the work they’re doing as consultants is more interesting. “I’m given a lot more responsibility here,” says one. “Already, I’m presenting to the top management of our clients, whereas when I was in banking I had little hope of meeting clients until I made vice president.” Another consultant says he’s presenting to top management and to general employees which gives him a better feeling for how the business really works: “In banking, you only think about the people at the top.”

One ex-banker turned consultant says the work in banking was too hurried and samey: “In banking, you end up specialized in a particular industry whereas here I’m more of a generalist. As a junior consultant, I get to handle a lot of different kinds of challenge each day and it’s about finding the right answer to a difficult problem. In banking, it was usually about getting the same things done in a short amount of time – we always felt very rushed.”

In theory, life as a consultant should be more fulfilling because consultants actually get to implement the recommendations they make, but one ‘executive transitioner’ who works with consultants moving into other industries says consultants get frustrated with the endless presentations and the limited opportunities to put their ideas into practice (a bit like junior bankers who put together endless pitchbooks for M&A deals that never happen). For this reason, he says they often move out of consulting and into management roles in industry instead.

The ex-McKinsey consultant-turned banker says life in consulting can be interesting due to the sheer variety of projects. On the other hand, the executive transitioner says some junior consultants get staffed across a broad range of projects managed by a range of different partners just to keep them interested, and that this can be come a struggle in itself.

One ex-consultant who now works for J.P. Morgan, says the standard of work is higher in banking: “In consulting I often felt that we were guessing the solutions without any reasonable argument. In banking, 100% correctness is always required and the level of work delivered to clients is very high.” This consultant also says that consultancy firms waste time and are inefficient: “In consulting, 4,000 slides were thrown on me to find something relevant for the task I had to do. You don’t get this in banking.”

You want to use your numerical skills? Choose banking

What makes a good banker vs. a good consultant? One McKinsey & Co. analyst who worked for a bank says bankers are more analytical: “They’re more numbers driven,” he says, adding that bankers use numbers to build up a big picture. By comparison, he says consultants have better communication skills and more aware of the small details behind a successful organization. “Junior bankers are routinely used to narrowing down a lot of info (eg. due diligence into its essential components), whereas most consultants will focus on getting additional information, creating deeper insights.”

You want to work with interesting people? Choose consulting. Want intelligent people? Choose banking

Consultants are probably more interesting people than bankers. Juniors who’ve worked in both industries tell us consultants are more “lifestyle” focused (i.e. they actually have lives outside work). By comparison, one consultant says M&A teams tend to be comprised of pretty similar high achievers. “This is great, because you’ll make friends for life in your analyst class, but in consulting you meet people with really varied interests and backgrounds, which can be more enriching.”

Another consultant who’s experienced both industries says people are smarter in banking. Consultants are good, but not that good.

You want a non-hierarchical culture? Choose consulting

While banks are all about saving money, consultants still have cash to splash. Juniors tell us the lifestyle in consulting is more fancy than in banks. While banks like Nomura now only offer cabs after 10pm and all banks breathe down your neck on things like colored photcopying, consultants say they get cabs to and from work, “many expensive dinners on company, private drivers to the airport.”

Another plus is that hierarchies in consulting firms are often flatter/less evident than in banking. “You feel that the seniors you’re working for actually care about your personal development and they’re often quite proactive in getting to know you beyond the scope of work,” says one McKinsey analyst. “That wasn’t really the feeling in banking – although granted I wasn’t to keen on spending that much more time with my MD after having worked with him for a daily average of 18 hours over at least a month.”

You want job prospects? Choose consulting

What happens when you decide you don’t want to work in banking or consulting any more?

If you work in consulting, you can always go off and become a senior executive in the sector you’ve been consulting in. McKinsey says 450 of its former consultants are currently running ‘billion dollar organizations’ around the world. They include Tidjane Thiam, the new CEO of Credit Suisse and James Gorman at Morgan Stanley.  

By comparison, swapping out of banking can be more of a challenge. The best people from investment banking go into private equity or event driven hedge funds. Sometimes they go into corporates to work for ‘in-house deal teams.’ But there are often more people who want to leave banking than there are places for them.

Interestingly, it seems very easy to go from banking into consulting and less easy to move in the opposite direction: there are plenty more people at McKinsey who used to work for Goldman Sachs but far fewer at Goldman Sachs who used to work for McKinsey.

One junior consultant says this is because banks offer an excellent schooling: “I’ll never learn as much in consulting as I did during those two years in banking, but I’m having a lot more fun as a consultant.”

If you’re smart therefore, maybe you’ll start out in banking and then move into consulting as your career progresses. That way you’ll be able to sample both worlds. And if you still can’t decide? You could always watch this. 

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Four unconventional techniques for getting a portfolio management job

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The most common misperception in the investment management industry is that academic credentials are the rite of passage to becoming a portfolio manager. I earned all the top designations and licenses and managed money for several years. It’s not all about having the right letters after your name.

Model the practice, not the theory

There are a million CFA charterholders, MBAs, PhDs and Master’s in Finance degree holders that can’t crack into the industry. If academic credentials were all that it took, then the entire graduating class of MIT would fill every buy-side position. I can say that theory and practice are two entirely different things.

What I have come to learn as a businesswoman is what I wish I had known when I was trying to glean wisdom from my Gordon Growth models. I would have gone so much further if I could have put down my TI-82 calculator and gotten some practical business insight. Instead of grinding out Accounts Receivables ratios and holding them up like they were the gospel, I wish I had spoken to more collections agencies. Instead of projecting out every revenue line on the income statement according to linear forecast, I wish I had taken the time to speak with sales professionals in that particular industry and understood what the market was really going to yield in the future. But I didn’t. I put my head own and journeyed to analyst land, in which linear relationships and formulas rule. The definition of a model is that which is a representation but not the reality.

Those who understand the realities are business are going to do best at picking the companies that will outperform in the reality of the market, hands down.

Have an angle

When I was on the buy side and I would interview someone, I would hear all sorts of responses to the question, “So what would you invest in right now if you had $1m?” While this question could have been answered with unlimited creativity, most of the time the responses were very forgettable.

People with strong brands win in a competitive marketplace, and I’m not talking about the font on your business card, resume and cover letter. When most investment analysts are going to say the same thing, have a unique angle that will set you apart. For example, If you want to work at a hedge fund, become a distressed debt expert and know everything about turnarounds that anyone could possibly know. Then start writing a blog about it and blast it out across social-media channels, or present it to your local CFA society. Get obsessed.

Promote yourself hard

Most people underestimate how hard it is to get and keep a job in this field. Remember that the really successful hedge fund managers own yachts. There’s a reason why analyst salaries are what they are, and it is not just because of the sheer amount of hours people work. These jobs are competitive, demanding and hard to get.

Most portfolio-manager wannabes are going to make an attempt for a few years, struggle and eventually fail. They’ll pursue some job in corporate finance or become a financial adviser and call it a day. If you’re not prepared to promote yourself hard, then the market will punish you.

Here are some examples of what I mean by promoting yourself hard. Contact 10-to-15 new contacts by phone each week on your lunch break or other downtime. Make an effort to reconnect with old college friends and request introductions to their contacts who work at asset management firms. Use the CFA program not only as an academic experience but also a way to make inroads with at least five new portfolio management contacts each month. Update your mock portfolio and models each quarter to reflect economic changes.

Time is of the essence

The other thing to realize is that if you want to become a portfolio manager, you don’t have unlimited time to do this. While it’s not impossible to crack into the industry when you are in your 30s or beyond, keep in mind at that point you are going to make an entry-level salary and compete with the 26-year-old who has a motorcycle and no checking account while you have a wife, a mortgage and two kids that you have to pick up from soccer practice twice a week at 6pm. Employers know that.

There’s no shortcut a buy side job, and the older you get, the lower the chance that you’ll be selected for the lower-level positions that require training and would be your entry point to a career in portfolio management. This is why I recommend that people in their 20s or even early 30s market themselves hard.

Sara Grillo, CFA, is a financial writer with a focus on branding and marketing for investment management firms and professionals. She is a former associate at City National Rochdale and Lehman Brothers, an investment adviser at Grillo Investment Management and a financial adviser at Empire Wealth Strategies.

Photo credit: ismagilov/GettyImages
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Morning Coffee: The most important finance jobs you never even knew existed. Top technologist’s date night

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If you’re contemplating where in the world to situate your finance job, you might have your eye on North America – which is predicted to benefit from Brexit irrespective of the fitfulness of Trump, or maybe Frankfurt – despite the resurgence of German political risk. Or maybe you’re entertaining some vague notion of the ‘BRIC countries’. If so, you’re getting it all wrong. You should swivel your gaze to China’s ‘Belt and Road’ initiative. This is where it’s all happening now.

For anyone unfamiliar with the dissonant nomenclature, Belt and Road is China’s tagline for an expected $900bn of infrastructure investments intended to connect it to the world. There are two parts: a ‘Silk Road Economic Belt’, by Road; and a ’21st Century Maritime Silk Road,’ by sea. The two will cover China, Central Asia, Russia and Europe (the Baltics), with the aim of linking China with the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean Sea through Central Asia and the Indian Ocean. The investments began in 2013 but are only just starting to get going. McKinsey equates the project to postwar reconstruction of Europe in the Marshall Plan, except it says Belt and Road has the potential to be bigger.  Banks are on full alert.

The South China Morning Post says Belt and Road offers U.S. banks a valuable opportunity to finally get a foothold in the vicinity of China. While many have struggled to compete against Chinese banks in China itself, the longer tendrils of Belt and Road mean they can build a presence in its environs.

Citi is already deploying corporate banking staff along the countries implicated in the initiative and John Mullally, director of financial services in Hong Kong and Shenzhen at recruitment firm Robert Walters, tells the SCMP that there’s also “strong hiring” from Chinese banks and investment funds in China itself. Most Belt and Road initiatives are financed by government-owned banks, with China Construction Bank Corp and Bank of China already raising billion-dollar funds for future investment, but Citi was recently the lead issuer in a rainbow bond issued by Bank of China to help finance new Belt and Road branches. There’s also the potential to fund multinationals looking to expand along the new axis, with the result that capital markets throughout the region are expected to expand.  

Europe and the U.S. look tired by comparison – if you want to insure your career until 2030, you might want to work somewhere along the lines below.

Belt and road banking jobs

Separately, Goldman Sachs’ chief technologist in Europe has an interesting idea of a date night out with her husband. Financial News says Joanne Hannaford, Goldman’s partner and head of Emea technology & global head of quality assurance engineering, enrolls a few times a year in programming courses at a London university. She and her husband (also a programmer) treat this as a date night and have dinner afterwards. “I think it is very cool to sit in a class and learn new programming languages alongside much younger people,” Hannaford says. Students who see her might want to ask for a job.

Meanwhile:

Bridgewater is equipping its employees with an automated “coach” based on artificial intelligence. “Let’s say you’re dealing with somebody who isn’t doing a good job or is somebody who has a personal problem, maybe an illness, or whatever the person’s circumstances are. What it does now is if you type into a ‘coach’ …  it then gathers information about the person and the circumstances, so they’re there. It analyzes what they’re like and provides guidance for what to do.” (Business Insider)

U.S. banks in London are lobbying for a continuation of the ‘overseas person exemption’ post-Brexit. This allows non-EU banks to carry out some forms of regulated activity in the UK without a specific license to operate. If it’s included in a “mutual access” arrangement agreed between the EU and UK before Brexit, U.S. banks should be able to continue operating in London as they do now. (Financial News) 

The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority has had zero applications for new licenses from EU banks operating in Britain who might lost the right to “passport” services into the country after Brexit takes place. (Reuters) 

French investment banks are thriving. They’re already focused on corporate clients, have escaped the worst of the rout in fixed income, and are generating a healthy return on equity thanks to their cash management businesses. (Wall Street Journal) 

A banker from Deutsche just joined a huge Asian buyout fund. (Reuters) 

Nomura hired a Deutsche Bank MD for its agency mortgage business in the U.S. (Reuters) 

Women are getting too clever for men. (Daily Mail) 

Aged three, U.S. children are more likely to ask for help. (Sage) 


Have a story or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

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Andrea Orcel on the boringness of banking and rehoming staff

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Andrea Orcel’s job doesn’t sound very exciting any more. In a Brexit breakfast discussion run by Financial News this morning, he complained that 60% of his job is now consumed by dealing with regulation, of which Brexit is – we imagine a part.

Orcel runs UBS’s investment bank, which has fallen to 10th place globally in Coalition’s ranking of banks, meaning that he could probably benefit from spending his time on more pressing considerations than the regulatory implications of Britain leaving the European Union. As we’ve noted before, for example, UBS has spent this year poaching fixed income salespeople from Goldman Sachs, implying that it’s trying to rebuild its fixed income business, where it ranks in the top three in G10FX, but almost nowhere for everything else.

Earlier this year, Orcel said it would take UBS between 18 months and two years to move staff out of London and that for this reason, time was of the essence. The Swiss bank is expected to choose Frankfurt as its trading hub and recent reports suggest it “could move” 250 jobs there, although CEO Sergio Ermotti indicated last year that as many as 30% of UBS’s 5,000 London jobs could move out as time progresses.  

Orcel also said this morning that a key factor in deciding where to move after Brexit is where bankers will be happy in terms of schools and housing. As we’ve noted before, many of UBS’s senior staff seem to live in Holland Park, West London. Orcel’s own West London residences were thrust into the spotlight a few years ago when his wife used them as photo-shoots for her interior design business. 

UBS’s emigre bankers would likely be happy in Amsterdam, where the education system is the fifth best in the world and you can live in a large house in villages like Aerdenhout, Bloemendaal and Heemstede for the same price as a three bedroom flat in Putney. Those who move could always ask Orcel’s wife to help them settle: Companies House indicates that she restarted an interior design business earlier this month – although its title “E11 Interior Design” suggests it’s focused on East London rather than Western Europe.


Have a story or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

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This hot new private equity firm has been poaching from Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley

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It’s not just hedge funds run by star traders that are attracting recruits from big investment banks. A new private equity fund, set up by two former TPG executives, has been recruiting from Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.

Novalpina Capital, started by the former head of TPG in Europe, Stephen Peel, and Stefan Kowski, who was a principal at the firm in Hong Kong and latterly a managing director at Centerbridge Partners, has hired a handful of former bankers as it targets €1bn for a debut fund.

Tobias Buck, who has worked for Goldman Sachs Principal Investment Area (PIA) for the past six years, has just joined Novalpina Capital as an investment professional. Buck joined Goldman Sachs in 2011 after completing a Masters degree in Business Administration at ESCP Europe.

Novalpina brought in Bastian Lueken from Platinum Capital as the third founding partner in July. Mikael Betito, a former Goldman Sachs investment banking analyst who has spent the past two years at PE firm Oaktree Capital Management in Paris, has also joined as a principal.

Novalpina now has seven employees and further down the tree, the PE firm has been hiring from U.S. investment banks. Leif Berger, an investment banking analyst who has worked at Morgan Stanley since 2014, has just joined as has Christopher Backes, who worked in the technology investment banking team at the U.S. investment bank.

Aside from the investment banking connection, the commonality among the new recruits is that they all speak German, suggesting the fund will be looking to Europe for investments from its London base.

There’s a proliferation of new private equity firms in London set up by former senior employees at large firms that could offer new job opportunities. The Builders Union, started by KKR’s former EMEA head of financial services Alexander Bruells and Marcus Bihler from Blackstone, has recently hired Perella Weinberg associate Laurynas Jankauskas.

Meanwhile, KKR big hitters Kugan Sathuyandarajah and Dominic Murphy kick-started 8C Capital earlier this month and Philip Wack, a director at KKR, launched Moonlake Capital in July. Haroun van Hövell, the head of energy for EMEA at KKR, launched Fort Bay Capital earlier this year.

Contact for news, tips and comments: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Image: Getty Images

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Why this Barclays MD quit banking to go back to the charity he worked for straight out of college

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Kanna Kunchala spent over 17 years in investment banking, as a managing director at both Goldman Sachs and Barclays investment bank across London and New York, but this was never part of the plan.

Kunchala started out at Goldman at the age of 30 after completing an MBA at Kellogg School of Management in 2001. While all his classmates were rushing to tech start-ups, he decided to accept an offer at Goldman Sachs. The dot-com bubble burst shortly after.

“It was rough, and not just for those who chose tech,” he says. “There were 105 associates in my class at Goldman Sachs. Within four years, I’d say there were 10 people left.”

For Kunchala, investment banking was supposed to be a means to an end. Up until his MBA, he’d worked as a speechwriter for the City of Boston, and spent three years straight out of college at a charity called City Year.

“I’d always intended to spend three years in the corporate sector, and then return to community service. But Goldman got me, and then offered a move to London. After a few years, Barclays hired me. There was always something new on the horizon, and we had kids. My stay in finance was elongated.”

Kunchala worked at Goldman Sachs for over 10 years, in emerging markets and European equity derivative sales before moving across to Barclays in 2012, where he spent the best part of six years. In August, he finally got around to quitting banking.

Call it full circle, but last month Kunchala quit Barclays, left London and returned to Boston to work for City Year. Now, he’s a senior vice president at the charity, which intervenes for children in high poverty areas who have gone off track with their schoolwork – typically around the ages of 9-11 – and uses a network of volunteers to get them back on the straight and narrow to high school graduation.

Kunchala says that his new role involves fund-raising for City Year from individuals, rather than sponsorship from organisations. Not surprisingly, he’s been calling former colleagues and clients, hoping to convince them to donate. “I wish it was as easy to get them to accept my calls when I was selling equity derivatives,” he says.

City Year started out in the U.S, and has outposts in 28 cities across the country. It also started out in the UK in 2010, and now has offices in London, Birmingham and Manchester. It has also been backed by funding from financial services organisations like Bain Capital, Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Credit Suisse to scale up over the next three years.

Kunchala says that he retained close links to City Year throughout his time in investment banking, and also convinced Jonathan Beebe, Barclays’ former head of equities for EMEA, to sign up as a trustee. Beebe has since tutored six students from Tower Hamlets himself.

“Both Goldman and Barclays gave me the latitude to do volunteer work. If this hadn’t been on the table, I’d have left banking a lot earlier,” he says. “The reality is, though, that it was the pull of volunteer work that led me to leave, not being pushed out of banking.”

Contact for news, tips and comments: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Image: Getty Images

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What to ask at European banking interviews now, by Deutsche Bank

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We’re approaching the end of year dead-zone for banking interviews involving senior and front office positions, but this doesn’t mean we’re in an interviewing interregnum. Even now, there are graduate interviews and internship interviews, and interviews involving people who are out of the market or who are willing to move without having their bonuses for 2017 bought out. 

If you fall into any of the latter categories and are a “live candidate”, you may be interested in the contents of a new note from Deutsche Bank’s banking analysts. In it, the analysts outline the issues currently bugging them about various banks in Europe. We’ve listed some of them below. If you’re interviewing with any of the banks on the list, you may want to gently approach some of these queries. We’re not suggesting anything too full frontal, unless you intend to antagonize your interviewers and walk away empty handed.

Questions to ask at Barclays interviews

1. What happens after Brexit? How does Barclays plan to retain passporting rights within Europe? How much of the Barclays investment bank business is business with European customers?

2. Barclays’ investment bank is a drag on group returns. The U.S. investment bank makes good revenues, but seems to have higher costs than its U.S. peers. Meanwhile, your European investment bank suffers from lower revenues/risk weighted assets than its European peers. How do you plan to address these issues?

3. Do you intend to continue growing share in your investment bank?

Questions to ask at BNP Paribas interviews 

1. What are your growth plans for Germany? How do you intend to expand the corporate and investment bank in the country?

2. You have a return on equity target of 10% in your business development plan for 2017-2020. However, this is on a higher capital base before (of 12% vs. 10%). How realistic do you think your new RoE target is? What will it take to achieve it?

3. Your equities sales and trading division gained market share in the first half of 2017. What drove this? Do you think it’s sustainable?

Questions to ask at Credit Suisse interviews

1. You’re planning an additional CHF1.5bn of cost savings in 2018. Where will these come from?

2. Would you say there are synergies to be achieved between your equities sales and trading business and your private banking business? How could you achieve them?

3. You’ve been hiring a lot for your equities business. What are your growth plans in equity derivatives and high and low touch equities trading?

Questions to ask at HSBC interviews

1. HSBC has increased its target cost savings from $4.5bn to $5bn a year to $6bn. Where are costs coming out from? How will the extra savings be made? What are the revenue implications?

2. Returns in your U.S. business are very low compared to your peers. What’s your strategy for improving these in the long term?

3. How are risk weighted assets, revenues and costs in your global banking and markets business allocated between Europe, the U.S. and Asia? How is this likely to change?

Questions to ask at SocGen interviews

1. SocGen is a world leading equity derivatives house, but your performance in equity derivatives has recently been weaker than peers. Why is that?

Questions to ask at UBS interviews

1. What kind of impact is Brexit likely to have on your operating model and costs? – What are your expectations for increased regulatory spend? Your current cost base includes CHF700m of temporary regulatory spend – is this likely to become permanent?

2. Your current CFH2.1bn cost savings programme is nearly completed. But your costs are still comparatively high. Do you see scope for further cost savings? Where though?


Have a story or comment you’d like to share? Contact: sbutcher@efinancialcareers.com

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Credit Suisse trading head swaps banking for tiny asset manager run by former colleagues

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The head of a major trading unit at Credit Suisse in London has just signed up to a small investment manager started by the bank’s former CEO of Asia-Pacific, Osama Abbasi.

Benjamin Leung, the head of EMEA macro investor products trading at Credit Suisse, left last month and has just landed at TriSpan LLP as a partner and deputy chief investment officer.

Leung worked at Credit Suisse for over 12 years, having joined as a director within structured credit trading in 2005 from General Re Financial Products in New York. He started his last position in 2015. Before this, he was head of commodity index options and exotics trading.

Trispan is a small company that has flown under the radar since Abbasi started it in 2015. The former head of equities for Asia-Pacific, he was promoted to CEO of Credit Suisse’s regional operation in 2010, but left five years later in one of the many management reshuffles at the investment bank. Karim Lari, the former deputy head of quantitative strategies at Credit Suisse is the firm’s chief operating officer and chief financial officer.

It has offices in London, New York and Dubai, but just 11 employees registered with the Financial Conduct Authority. However, it has attracted some big names.

Gregor Lanz, a former managing director at Goldman Sachs in London, joined as a partner last year, as did Said Freiha, the former head of MENA family offices at Deutsche Bank, while Mufid Shawwa, head of Credit Suisse’s fund-linked and equity derivatives coverage for MENA signed up in 2015.

Trispan’s latest accounts, to 31 December 2016, show that it made a £2.3m loss. It paid its eight members £592.3k, the accounts suggest.

Contact for news, tips and comments: pclarke@efinancialcareers.com

Image: Getty Images

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