Not exactly - but they're a lot less lavish than they used to be, says Emma Charnock, regional director of Hays Banking in Asia. Expats traditionally brought to a company a wealth of experience and an excellent education from abroad; they were valued for their insights and were remunerated accordingly. However, today's local employers view expat candidates on an equal footing with local candidates since both possess excellent overseas education and... Read more
By Emma Charnock 07 Aug 2007 - 0 comments
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
By Hugh Karseras 02 Aug 2007 - 2 comments
Employment opportunities for investment bankers are increasing in the Middle East, as cash-rich local companies look for buyouts or mergers to build their international reputation. It's a trend that's creating opportunities for global investment companies. Goldman Sachs, for example, is poised to reap US$11.3bn in advisory fees from a multi-billion dollar mega-merger in the Middle East. Goldman, which moved into a new Dubai office in March after gaining a banking licence last... Read more
By eFinancialCareers Gulf 26 Jul 2007 - 14 comments
There are still plenty of Middle East-focused staff who are based elsewhere and fly in and out for meetings. When JPMorgan appointed a new telecoms, media and technology banker to cover the Middle East last month, it did so despite lacking an established investment banking presence outside Saudi Arabia. Mehmet Abbasoglu, a one-time head of investment banking at Merrill Lynch in Turkey, will be based in London and join a long... Read more
By Sarah Butcher 13 Jul 2007 - 2 comments
Fancy working in Ras Al Khaimah? Now's your chance. A recent report in the Khaleej Times suggests over 1,000 companies may move to the new Ras Al Khaimah Financial City. Jobs are likely to follow. "The financial city is expected to create thousands of jobs as it strives to become a financial services hub," says Dr Imad Haffar, chief operating officer of Rakeen, the real estate arm of the Ras Al Khaimah... Read more
By eFinancialCareers Gulf 10 Jul 2007 - 11 comments
Want to know why packing your bags and cashing in on the boom in the Middle East might not be such a good idea after all? 1. It won't last At a conference last week in the City, Gerard Lyons, chief economist and global head of research at Standard Chartered Bank, said there have been plenty of booms in the Middle East before – and they've all turned to busts. The... Read more
By Sarah Butcher 05 Jul 2007 - 28 comments
Costs may be rising, but you can still make more money working and living in Dubai than in London. Life in Dubai is 40% cheaper than London and 12% cheaper than New York. But salaries for senior bankers are often on a par and bonuses are rising to match. Even in those sectors where pay is higher in London, it may only be just enough to offset the cost differential. For... Read more
By Matt Nash 03 Jul 2007 - 12 comments
Step aside Dubai, Qatar also wants to become a regional financial services hub. Last week, Qatar and Dubai teamed up to create a new US$1bn investment vehicle to look at regional investment opportunities. The Qatar Financial Centre (QFC) regulatory authority recently granted Citigroup a banking licence to open a corporate branch, while Barclays got the nod in September. The banks will have their offices in the QFC headquarters in Doha. The chairman... Read more
By eFinancialCareers Gulf 28 Jun 2007 - 5 comments
Standard Chartered is moving 100 staff to Dubai. Is it down to low-cost local staff or local customers? Staff making the move will be monitoring the bank's loans and trading interest rate products and the currencies of G10 countries. With pay for traders lower in Dubai than London, is the move cost-driven? And are other banks likely to follow in Standard Chartered's footsteps? Mark Thomas, a London-based analyst at Keefe, Bruyette... Read more
By Henry Harington 26 Jun 2007 - 3 comments
Saudi Arabia's banking sector was already hot. It's now in danger of overheating. Yassar Toukan, general manager of Saudi recruitment firm Brainlease, says relationship managers are in the highest demand at both commercial and private banks. Relationship managers act as a liaison between the bank and the client and sell the client on bank services. "Commercial banks are looking to lure and retain large corporate clients; private banks are focusing on high... Read more
By Matt Nash 14 Jun 2007 - 1 comment
Burj-al-Arab, Dubai's iconic hotel, designed to resemble a billowing sail, could also symbolise the Gulf property market running ahead of a fair wind. Developments such as The Palm, for example, so loved by footballers' wives, have grabbed the headlines and oil approaching US$70 a barrel is fuelling a wave of infrastructure investment that's predicted to hit US$1.3 trillion between 2007 and 2012. But recruiters are making heavy weather of finding the... Read more
By Henry Harington 05 Jun 2007 - 1 comment
Living in Dubai isn't quite as cost effective as it used to be, but it's still a lot cheaper than, say, London. The good news is that Gulf incomes are tax-free and an array of perks typically makes life that little bit easier to bear. The bad news is that perks aren't being doled out as liberally as they once were. The bill for schooling the children of the region's army of... Read more
By Henry Harington 31 May 2007 - 0 comments
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
By Bill Cohan 24 May 2007 - 1 comment
Local GCC banks don't pay as well as international rivals, but that may be changing. Russell Adam, a consultant at London-based search firm Akamai Financial Markets, tells us, "If you're on an expat package, it can definitely be beneficial to work for an international bank. However, your career may progress more rapidly at a fast-growing local house." Gareth Clayton, a director at search firm Charterhouse Partnership in Dubai, says local banks are... Read more
By Henry Harington 22 May 2007 - 1 comment
Despite a candidate-driven market, it seems local banks in the Middle East have not been pushing the dhow out far enough to attract staff. A senior local recruiter in Dubai says that as a result they are losing staff to the international banks as compensation becomes more focused on bonuses. Some of the newer regional players are throwing big numbers to retain or attract talent, “but you have to if you... Read more
By Sarah Butcher 18 May 2007 - 1 comment
Just how easy is it for Western women bankers to land jobs in the growing financial centres of Dubai, Bahrain and Qatar? Not very, according to some headhunters, who weren't overly keen on being drawn on the subject. "This is too close to the bone," was a common response, although we were told by one London-based headhunter that he'd recently placed a woman and there had been "no issues". Scratch the surface,... Read more
By Sarah Butcher 10 May 2007 - 12 comments
William D. Cohan, a former managing director at JPMorgan Chase & Co. and former VP at Lazard Frères, explains why M&A bankers don’t merit mega-bucks. The end of the first quarter of 2007 brought the news that global announced M&A deal volume for the three-month period topped US$1.1trillion – making this first quarter the busiest first quarter on record. Not surprisingly, the investment bankers shepherding all these deals are positively giddy,... Read more
By Bill Cohan 03 May 2007 - 2 comments
Our recent poll suggested bankers in Dubai are the most fearful for their futures. We asked bankers across our sites in Europe, the Asia-Pacific region and Dubai to rate their chances of losing their jobs over the next two years. The bad news? Almost half the respondents – 48.9% – from the booming emirate reckoned the chances were “high to very high” that they would be packing their bags within the... Read more
By eFinancialCareers Gulf 01 May 2007 - 13 comments
Gulf-based private equity staff are already paid more than colleagues in New York and London. And they could be on track to earn even more. Local recruiters say demand for private equity (PE) professionals has swollen in recent months as more and more money finds its way into the region. “Private equity has really been hotting up since January,” says Emma Hackforth, founder of Dubai-based recruitment firm Matchsticks. “The US fear... Read more
By Amil Khan 24 Apr 2007 - 1 comment
Mike Brennan, chief executive of Akamai Financial Markets, offers guidance on when to make the move overseas – and when not to. If you intend to build a career in financial services, it’s not 100% necessary to have experience of working overseas. A lot of people enjoy very successful financial careers in one centre; they become established at what they do, and make a name for themselves in that particular market.... Read more
By Mike Brennan 17 Apr 2007 - 0 comments