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How hot is private banking hiring anyway?

14 August 2008

Paul Clarke

Recruitment in wealth management is the golden child of financial services, but that doesn’t mean it’s any easier to land a job.

Credit Suisse reckons it’s due to hire 1,000 advisors globally in its private banking division (after taking on 120 in the last quarter alone), Morgan Stanley is rumoured to have appointed 519 new advisors already this year, Merrill Lynch has added 490 globally in the last 12 months and UBS is doing its best to stop its relationship managers being poached by everyone from Vestra to Julius Baer.

It’s no wonder. In Q208 Morgan Stanley’s wealth management division’s net revenues were $1.7bn – up 4% on a bumper Q207. Citi’s private banking arm is up by 4% on the same time last year. UBS, meanwhile, has promised to focus more heavily on its wealth management wing after haemorrhaging CHF17.3bn in the first half of 2008.

What’s more, according to the Financial Times family offices are eager to take on private bankers.

Mark Somers, managing director of private banking headhunter the Somers Partnership, says: “We’re as busy as we ever have been and there’s a very strong demand for private bankers with a good track record.”

But in spite of the hive of activity, it’s no easier to get a job.

Rodolphe Morteuil, managing director of headhunters McKinsey Mortreuil Clarke: “Clients refuse to compromise on quality, which doesn’t make the recruitment process any easier.”

Most private banks are looking for the same thing – a proven track record and, the holy grail, a transferable book of clients, says Christian Sulger managing director of private banking focused search firm Sulger Buel & Co.

When they find someone matching this description, their generosity knows no bounds: Morteuil says two year guaranteed bonuses and sign-ons are still on offer. But salaries have remained relative static. A top banker with 10+ years of asset gathering experience can command a package of £200k-£250k, according to recruiters.

Whether clients will follow bankers is questionable, however. Last week, UBS won a court injunction to prevent Vestra poaching any more of its staff and clients. Vestra is set to challenge the ruling in October. Until then, the staff it’s poached are forbidden from approaching any of their UBS contacts.

Comments (2)

  • An update from the Shires:
    Regional Wealth Management recruitment is buoyant too; both within Private Banking and Private Client Investment Management.
    The calibre of individuals and Client demand continuing to outstrip the availability of quality Candidates , remains the everpresent challenge.

    RJA Wilson, Managing Director, Executive Dynamics Ltd. 14 Aug 2008

    RECOMMEND Recommended 0 times | Alert Moderator

  • There is a trend to divide the responsibilities of  managing the client and his/her money,by the Investment manager.The servicing and client  retention function is seperated from the managing of the portfolio which is the correct model from the asett managers perpective but probabaly not from the Client advisers view.The difficulty therefore is sourcing candidates who are experienced enough to have the credibility required to mange relationships with intermedaries and also the consumer,and are grown up enough to be able to differentiate ther skills between sales,relationship management and investment management.The investment manager often removes himself from the prospecting and vice versa but they must both learn to live with each other ,and respect each others skill set.

    Martin Mulligan-McArthur 14 Aug 2008

    RECOMMEND Recommended 0 times | Alert Moderator

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