The Economist - UK (2022-04-16)

(Antfer) #1

64 Finance & economics The Economist April 16th 2022


Asiasection).Foodandenergypricesare
fuellingunrestinTunisiaandPakistan.
Severalmiddle­incomecountriesface
idiosyncraticcrises:Chinaislockingdown
tobattlea coronavirusoutbreak,andAr­
gentina continues to stagger under the
weight of unsustainable debts. But the
greatestvulnerabilityisfoundamongthe
pooresteconomies,nearly60%ofwhich
areindebtdistressorathighriskofit,ac­
cordingtotheWorldBank.Oneworryis
thatalmosta thirdoftheirtotaldebtnow
carriesa floatingrateofinterest,upfrom
15%in2005,makingthemmoreexposedto
monetarytightening.

It doesnothelpthatit isharderthanev­
ertoprovideemergencysupporttostrug­
glingpoorcountries.Inaggregatetheyowe
moretoChinathantothe“ParisClub”of
richgovernmentswhohavetypicallyco­
operated to restructuredebts. So far at­
tempts to includeChina andothernew
lenderslikeSaudiArabiaandIndiaindebt­
restructuringeffortshaveflopped.Theimf
onlylendstocountries withsustainable
debts,andtheWestdoesnotwanttoseeits
aidbeingsiphonedoffbyothercreditors.
Geopoliticalconflict ismakingthepoor
world’s economic problems worse, and
hardertoresolve.n

Workinginfinance

Talent wars


A


fter a dismaldecade,  bankers  of  all
stripes had reasons to be cheerful last
year. Eighteen months of soaring corporate
dealmaking generated blockbuster fees for
mergers  and  acquisitions  (m&a)  desks.
Their counterparts in debt advisory played
midwife  to  a  deluge  of  newly  minted
bonds.  Bouts  of  high  volatility  buoyed
traders’ revenues. Though the dealmaking
frenzy  may  have  cooled  a  little  in  2022,
lenders are licking their lips at the prospect
of sharply rising interest rates.
Yet the industry faces a talent squeeze.
Bank bosses used the last earnings season
of  2021  to  gripe  about  the  problem.  Deut­
sche  Bank’s  Christian  Sewing  was  “very
concerned”  about  a  war  for  talent;  Gold­
man Sachs’s David Solomon said it caused
“wage  inflation  everywhere”.  The  subject
seemed likely to raise its head again as Wall
Street  banks  reported  their  first­quarter
earnings after we went to press. 
A  survey  of  267  financial­services  em­
ployers, conducted in November by Hays, a
London­based  recruitment  firm,  found
that  83%  had  suffered  from  a  skills  short­
age in the past year. More than half attrib­
uted  that  to  competition  from  rivals.  This
is a sector more used to causing shortages
than  suffering  from  them,  sucking  in
would­be  maths  teachers  and  disaffected
doctors.  Nor  has  its  promise  of  riches
dimmed: average pay at Goldman last year
was $400,000. Why the struggle to hire? 
One  popular  line  of  argument  holds
that banking is the victim of a generational
shift.  Everyone  from  hiring  managers  to
university  careers  services  reports  that
young  workers  care  less  about  salary  and
more about work­life balance. Most of all,
they  want  to  work  for  a  company  with  a

clearsocialpurpose.Allof that puts the re­
cruitment  model  for  traditional  financial
firms—high  pay  in  return  for  gruelling
hours, and work with a social value that is
not immediately obvious—at risk.
These apparent preferences are hard to
square  with  the  behaviour  of  younger  ap­
plicants.  Darren  Burns  of  Morgan  McKin­
ley, another recruiter, says they are becom­
ing  more  hard­nosed  in  salary  negotia­
tions, not less. “Decent candidates will line
up  half  a  dozen  offers  when  they  used  to
only  pursue  one,”  he  says.  They  are  also
more aware of their market value. As a re­
sult, even back­office roles are having their
salaries  bid  up.  One  senior  Wall  Street
banker puts it bluntly: “They say they care
less about salary, but they absolutely care if
the bank across the street is paying more.”

Banking’s  attractions,  then,  do  not
seem to have lost their appeal. Instead the
battle for talent is driven by three other fac­
tors. Start with the scale of the demand for
bankers’ work. According to Refinitiv, a da­
ta  provider,  companies  announced  m&a
deals  worth  $5.8trn  in  2021,  64%  higher
than the year before and easily beating the
previous high in 2007. Initial public offer­
ings  had  a  record­breaking  year,  too,  with
newly  listed  firms  raising  $608bn.  And  of
the  $10trn  in  American  corporate  bonds,
42% was issued in the past two years.
All that equates to an avalanche of work
for  investment  bankers.  The  industry’s
staffing model, meanwhile, is ill­suited to
spikes in demand. “If the large banks aren’t
able to pay their best people well, they lose
them  all,”  explains  one  headhunter.  The
only way to do that and remain profitable
is to be ruthless about headcount, running
teams  with  “very  little  fat”  in  normal
times. When business balloons, as it did in
2021, those lean teams very quickly end up
working  at  full  capacity—at  which  point
the only options are to poach people from
elsewhere  or  to  turn  down  business.  The
result  is  a  fierce,  zero­sum  skirmish  be­
tween banks for skilled staff.
At the same time, the list of other firms
offering bankers eye­watering salaries has
lengthened.  Private­equity  funds  have
long  piggybacked  off  the  training  offered
by the big investment banks, luring talent
away  with  better  pay  and  slightly  gentler
working hours. Banks in America are par­
ticularly  vulnerable,  with  a  supersized
private­investment  industry  offering  just
as  supersized  compensation.  (Blackstone,
one  of  the  biggest  such  firms,  received
29,000  applications  for  100  junior­level
jobs  in  2021.)  In  recent  years,  these  have
been  joined  by  a  growing  cohort  of  deal­
makers  going  it  alone  and  taking  firms
public  via  special­purpose  acquisition
companies.  m&aboutiques,  which  advise
on  mergers  without  the  full­service  offer­
ing  of  an  investment  bank,  entice  still
more bankers away from banking.
Third,  there  has  indeed  been  a  shift  in
workers’  attitudes—just  not  one  that  re­
sults  from  them  being  unwilling  to  hack
the  hours  of  their  predecessors.  Florian
Pollner  of  McKinsey,  a  consultancy,  de­
scribes how in conversations with human­
resources  bosses,  a  theme  that  comes  up
time  and  again  is  younger  workers’  more
modular approach to their careers. Instead
of  looking  for  jobs  for  life,  they  seek  out
roles  they  can  spend  a  few  years  in  and
then leave with broader options.
That works in banks’ favour for recruit­
ing junior staff: their graduate schemes are
still seen as excellent preparation for a ca­
reer.  But  it  also  puts  pressure  on  attrition
rates in an industry already known for the
mercenary outlook of its employees.
These  forces  are  changing  the  way

The latest industry to suffer labour shortages: investment banking 

Willing to walk away
Free download pdf