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Yes, transaction services are hot

16 December 2008

Sarah Butcher

Forget M&A, capital markets, or proprietary trading. The new, new thing in 2009 may well be the innately unglamorous area of transaction services.

Banks’ transaction services or cash management teams help corporate customers manage their cashflow and liquidity requirements. The Financial Times last week pointed out that while most other areas of banking are struggling, cash management businesses still boast an annual growth rate of 10-25%.

Cash management professionals say revenue growth isn't the only thing driving banks’ interest in the business.

“Managing cash for corporates brings liquidity into a bank,” says Colin Hemsley, head of major corporate sales at LloydsTSB. “And that helps immensely when the cost of funding in the interbank market is so high.”

Much of the data collection involved in cashflow management work is now automated, but companies still help interpreting the data when it comes in. Hemsley says offering this help has the added advantage of forging strong client relationships. “It gives you good visibility of what’s going on, and in difficult times like this, that’s a really good thing,” he says.

All of this means that cash management teams are unlikely to shrink in 2009, and may well grow. “For many banks this is an area of focus. People and resources will be switching into it,” predicts Hemsley.

From capital markets to cashflow?

So, what’s the possibility of a down at heel investment banker reinventing himself as a cashflow specialist?

Hemsley’s not so sure: “It’s very, very different to capital markets and M&A,” he says. “You need a really good understanding of how payment systems work, of the implications of the Single European Payments Area, and how the payment and account structures work all the way down a company’s supply chain in order to optimize them.”

However, Mark Cooper, head of UK cash management at SEB, says there could be openings for bankers with corporate relationships on the sales side of the business.

“Investment bankers could certainly reinvent themselves, but there would be cultural difficulties to overcome: selling cashflow management isn’t exactly rocket science,” he says.

Comments (18)

anyone can do investment banking, even a hairdresser!

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Comments (18)

  • rocket science can only be rocket science, anyone can do investment banking, even a hairdresser!

    cynic 16 Dec 2008

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  • cynic, when the hair business is so good, why would the hairdresser want to change career?

    Dude 16 Dec 2008

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  • I disagree, i think some parts of IB involves the financial equivalent of rocket science. Try working out the price of one of those infamous CDO's and you'll know what i mean.

    anon 16 Dec 2008

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  • Dude, who told you that I want to change career and Anon, can you value a CDO?

    Sorry guys but I have a customer. Time to earn some money.....

    and I'm talking about M&As.

    cynbic 16 Dec 2008

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  • Read some chapters of CDO valuation in some textbooks- CFA L2 volumes, if that is your benchmark for its being rocket science.

    saurya_s 16 Dec 2008

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  • Anon

    Its easy, develop a mathematical model for the price of a CDO (in the form a partial or stochastic differential equation, with appropriate boundary conditions) and solve it for some pricing formula or some numerical solution. Getting a rocket into space and back to earth, efficiently and responsibly, thats a different ball game.

    realrocketscientist 16 Dec 2008

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  • ok, then get a hairdresser to value the CDO and lets see what they come up with.

    me 16 Dec 2008

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  • I agree realrocketscientist.  Its just a shame that we don't get paid well enough to do rocket science - atleast in comparison to doing something trivial like valuing a CDO.  I'm not angry at finance, but I'm angry at how unfair the system is.

    aiQUANT 16 Dec 2008

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  • aiQuant, you're joking right? there's obviously more demand for people who can value CDO's than people who can put rockets into space. what's unfair about that? next you're going to complain that, say, cuckoo clock makers in australia aren't earning enough. If there is no market, it won't pay. Majority of the population decides. nothing fairer than that.

    anon2 16 Dec 2008

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  • Love your comments guys !

    lost 16 Dec 2008

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