Banks try to calm staff
nerves with staggered Brexit shift
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[March 28, 2017]
By Anjuli Davies
LONDON(Reuters)
- Banks are treading carefully, enacting two-stage contingency plans, to
avoid losing nervous London-based staff as they work out how many jobs
will have to move to continental Europe as Britain exits the European
Union.
British Prime Minister Theresa May will trigger formal EU divorce
proceedings on Wednesday, launching two years of negotiations that will
shape the future of Britain and Europe as well as London's place as a
global financial center.
The move will also mark the point when investment banks, whose priority
will be to ensure they can continue servicing their clients across
Europe after March 29, 2019, begin taking concrete steps to prepare for
Britain being outside the bloc.
"Everybody is prepared for a cliff edge scenario, which means you need
to more or less have, in a very short period of time, people on the
ground making sure whatever happens you are set," Hubertus Vaeth, head
of Frankfurt Main Finance, a group backed by local government to promote
the city, said.
This first phase involves relatively small numbers to make sure the
requisite licenses, technology and infrastructure are in place, while
the next requires longer term thinking on what the their European
business will look like in the future, which is when bigger moves might
take place.
"We see a very short term dispersal of a small number of people ... in
the next couple of months," Vaeth said.
ANXIETY IN THE CITY
Brexit is making many of Britain's 2.2 million financial industry
workers anxious about whether they risk losing their jobs or will have
to consider relocating to Frankfurt, Dublin, Paris, Luxembourg or even
Malta.
"If I ... stand up in front of my staff in London and say 'I'm moving
1,000 of you to Frankfurt', how many do you think will stick around?" a
senior executive at a global bank said.
Employers must decide whether to try to move London-based staff or pay
them off and hire again where any foreign operation is set up. This
means they need to identify which roles will be impacted, which is
likely to take some time.
Bank executives say moving significant numbers of jobs will likely form
part of the final phase of adaptation to Brexit, but will not happen
before any final deal is struck.
"Don't look for a 'big bang' the day after Brexit in March 2019,"
another senior executive at an international bank said.
"Banks will be looking to use what they have to be able to continue
operating and servicing clients in the EU. The jobs that will move, the
impact will be known in 2025 and 2030 not 2019," the executive added
In this so-called initial phase, staff moves are expected to be in the
low hundreds, with the majority not taking place until at least 2018,
banking sources told Reuters.
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Workers walk in the rain at the Canary Wharf business district in
London, Britain November 11, 2013. REUTERS/Eddie Keogh/File Photo
"It's
not staff moving, it's jobs moving," said one source.
"There
will also be some natural attrition whereby roles will not filled in London. It
won't really be so noticeable and there likely won't be any big announcement."
Stuart Gulliver, chief executive of HSBC, has softened his tone on his bank's
plan to move 1,000 staff to Paris, saying that half are French people who would
be returning home and the bank is nowhere near talking to staff about the move.
"Within one to two years, the City of London will have completely replaced the
jobs that will have moved," he said.
Banks only need around 30 people to get a subsidiary in Europe up and running,
including setting up the infrastructure, legal and technology systems, the
Association of Foreign Banks in Germany says.
DESTINATION UNKNOWN
While
Europe's financial centers are fighting for the spoils of Brexit, banks are
unlikely to converge on a single city at first and are likely to want to retain
some flexibility.
"There won't be a single location – country teams will likely be based more in
situ," another banking source familiar with contingency plans said.
Goldman Sachs International <GS.N>, the European arm of the Wall Street bank,
said last week it would begin by moving hundreds of people out of London in what
its chief Richard Gnodde called "contingency plans" for the first phase.
Meanwhile, U.S. rival Morgan Stanley <MS.N>, which one source told Reuters will
ultimately have to move up to 1,000 jobs out of London, but may initially shift
just 300 staff, according to reports in February.
And although Dublin is Bank of America's <BAC.N> default destination for a new
base within the EU because it already has a fully licensed operation there,
others are being examined.
"We are playing through all the scenarios. Nothing has been decided. Dublin is
an option, just as Frankfurt or Amsterdam," Nikolaus Naerger, Bank of America’s
head of corporate banking in Germany said.
(Editing by Alexander Smith)
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