With healthy profits last year, and plans for up to 20% rise in assets, the Bahraini banking sector is suddenly looking like a more attractive place to work. The liberalisation of Bahrain’s investment laws has seen the assets of Bahrain’s banks rise by over 30% in 2007 to $285bn, according to a report by Securities and Investment Company (SICO). It anticipates another 20-25% per annum over the next three years. What’s more,... Read more
By Paul Clarke 30 May 2008 - 5 comments
Financial services firms in the GCC are set to increase their headcount by 30% in the next few years, and up to 50,000 more jobs could be created. A study by Hewitt Associates shows that banks in the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman and Jordan are laggards when it comes to recruiting enough people to cope with increased levels of business. As a result, they’re set to splurge on staff. “Being... Read more
By Paul Clarke 28 May 2008 - 2 comments
In the past, the Middle East has struggled to attract top bankers, but now international investment banks are moving them there in numbers. Citigroup The struggling US bank announced the appointment of Alberto Verme to head up its investment banking division in Dubai. Verme is one of Citigroup’s most senior bankers, currently global co-head of investment banking, and the move is part of a wider effort to bolster the bank’s presence in... Read more
By Paul Clarke 16 May 2008 - 1 comment
Pay in the Middle East is spiralling. It now makes up almost 60% of banks’ operating costs. A survey by consultancy Hewitt Associates suggests salaries in Oman and Qatar lead the way when it comes to eating into banks’ profits. But pay across the Middle East banking sector is becoming a problem – particularly when you consider that the average US bank aims to keep compensation costs below 50% of... Read more
By Paul Clarke 07 May 2008 - 4 comments
Jobs are plentiful, talent is scarce, competition is fierce and fickle financial services professionals in the Middle East are now changing jobs every seven months. The skills shortage in financial services in the Middle East is well known and it seems bankers are using this to their advantage – bolting after bonuses and shifting jobs for extra cash or a better position. Speaking at a recent conference, and citing headhunter... Read more
By Paul Clarke 01 May 2008 - 6 comments
Losing your job is never nice, but in Dubai it’s a particularly horrible experience – especially if you’re an expat. The root of the horror is that both residency and the right to work for expats working in Dubai’s finance industry are dependent on sponsorship by the employer. If you’re laid off, this goes up in smoke and you have 30 days to leave the country, unless a new employer... Read more
By Paul Clarke 30 Apr 2008 - 1 comment
Rules forbidding the issue of stock options to expats in the Middle East are a major deterrent to foreign talent, so are banks offering any alternatives? The concept of Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs) is a standard part of compensation packages in developed financial markets like the UK and US, but laws in the Gulf mean that expat employees are forbidden from owning stock in local companies. Lynda O’Mahoney, senior... Read more
By Paul Clarke 08 Apr 2008 - 0 comments
It might be wise not to be too rude to a financial headhunter scoping you out for a job in the GCC – it could be the bank itself in disguise. EFG-Hermes, a Middle Eastern investment bank, has revealed that it has its own in-house team of headhunters, which it claims is both a cheaper and a safer option. Declan Ball, global head of corporate human resources at EFG-Hermes, says:... Read more
By Paul Clarke 04 Apr 2008 - 6 comments
Banks are splashing the cash on locals as they struggle to meet nationalization targets within a limited talent pool. But what do they really think about this? The government in the UAE has decreed that in all firms 40% of employees should be locals, which is no mean feat when you consider that only 20% of the population are Emiratis. Add niche banking skills to the mix and it becomes... Read more
By Paul Clarke 01 Apr 2008 - 2 comments
As multinational banks feel the pinch in the wake of the credit crunch, could local banks in the GCC become a more attractive option for talent? Alex Cormack, director, head of Middle East at recruiters Sheffield Haworth, says: “Local banks have had to start to recruit more aggressively, and the trend is for them to look very seriously at senior-level bankers from top-tier investment banks and move them to the... Read more
By Paul Clarke 27 Mar 2008 - 2 comments
Middle East virgin and fretting about a move to the region? Relocation expert Shirley Morrison offers some handy hints on what to expect. What’s the first step when someone approaches you with a view to a move? Find out what their budget is. Once we establish that I can give them some idea of what they can expect when they move here. Where do most of your clients come from? Mainly from the... Read more
By Paul Clarke 25 Jan 2008 - 11 comments
After a bumper 2007 in the Middle East, is it going to be more of the same, or will some sectors lose out in 2008? 2008 will be a good year for… Sovereign wealth funds Sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) had a good year in 2007 – will 2008 be even better still? Last year, Merrill Lynch economist Alex Patelis predicted that Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds would soon start acquiring asset management firms... Read more
By Paul Clarke 31 Dec 2007 - 0 comments
As 2007 draws to a close, what was hot and what was not in the GCC? Here’s our considered opinion. 2007 was a good year for… Private equity In 2007 international private equity funds such as Advent, Carlyle and EFG-Hermes Private Equity all set up shop in the Middle East. Together with growth at local funds such as Dubai International Capital, Abraaj Capital and KAMCO, this fuelled demand for private equity professionals to... Read more
By Paul Clarke 21 Dec 2007 - 0 comments
Will a tumbling dollar spur the GCC countries to come good on their promise of a single currency for 2010 and what will this mean for pay? The meeting of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) this month had traders speculating on a possible de-pegging from the weak dollar, which is spurring high inflation within the GCC region. However, no clear decision was reached and the GCC meeting’s conclusion was that 2010 was... Read more
By Paul Clarke 19 Dec 2007 - 0 comments
Our survey suggests Gulf bankers are an optimistic bunch. Just when we accuse you of being a cynical bunch, financial services workers in the Gulf emerge as among the most optimistic in the world. The results of eFinancial Careers.com’s survey are in, and amid the global doom and gloom surrounding the credit markets an overwhelmingly positive sentiment has emerged from the Gulf region. The survey took in responses from 18,000 financial services workers... Read more
By Paul Clarke 04 Dec 2007 - 0 comments
Which banks and bankers are suffering the most? No prizes for guessing… ACUTE PAIN 1. Merrill Lynch Share price: down 44% since January 2007. Bonus per head*: $181.3k, down 25% on 2006. Net profit for the first nine months of 2007: $1.9bn, down 61%. Redundancies: none announced so far, but exit of chief exec Stan O’Neal is imminent. 2. Bear Stearns Share price: down 38% since January 2007. Bonus per head*: $407.6k, down 20% on 2006. Net... Read more
By Sarah Butcher 31 Oct 2007 - 0 comments
So is Dubai a major global financial centre (and a great place to develop your career)? Not according to a new survey. The second report from the Global Financial Centres Index (GFCI) suggests Dubai falls outside the top 20 global financial centres and ranks behind the likes of Toronto, which is hardly known for its financial prowess. The good news is that the desert city doesn’t have far to go before it’s... Read more
By Paul Clarke 30 Oct 2007 - 13 comments
The landmark US$3.8bn DP World flotation could see the IPO floodgates open in Dubai, and that could generate increased demand for ECM professionals in the region. Earlier in 2007, Ernst & Young predicted US$18.3bn of IPOs in Dubai this year, but we’re a long way off that right now. Until the DP deal, there were just five ECM deals on the Dubai International Stock Exchange (DIFX) this year, representing a meagre... Read more
By Paul Clarke 24 Oct 2007 - 1 comment
David Bledin, ex-banker, now author and MBA student, on why he wouldn’t go back into banking if you paid him. I’ve just started an MBA programme and it’s amazing the number of people coming from non-banking industries who have somehow managed to maintain a startling innocence regarding the Street – despite the bleak stories they must have soaked up from their acquaintances. They seem to focus on that starting salary and... Read more
By David Bledin 18 Oct 2007 - 0 comments
Middle East state investment funds are flexing their financial muscles globally. What are the chances of getting a job for one? In recent weeks, the Abu Dhabi government has bought into US private equity group Carlyle, and the Qatar Investment Authority has bought into Swedish exchange OMX. Last year Dubai bought control of ports company P&O (including its Australian operations) as well as hotel company Travelodge. As regional sovereign funds expand their... Read more
By Henry Harington 16 Oct 2007 - 6 comments