5,000 UK finance jobs may be moved by
Brexit, half earlier forecast: Reuters
Send a link to a friend
[March 28, 2018]
By Andrew MacAskill, Carolyn Cohn and Simon Jessop
LONDON (Reuters) - The number of finance
jobs to be shifted out of Britain or created overseas by March 2019 due
to Brexit has dropped by half compared to six months ago to 5,000 roles,
firms employing the bulk of UK-based workers in international finance
told Reuters.
A Reuters survey of 119 firms, following up on a survey published in
September 2017, also found that Paris has overtaken Frankfurt as the
most popular destination for the new roles.
Some banks lowered the estimates for jobs they need to move as they
consider more carefully how much of their operations they will need in
the European Union if Britain loses access to the bloc's single market,
the survey found.
A more conciliatory tone toward the finance sectors from British Prime
Minister Theresa May's government and progress in talks with the EU have
also had an effect.
The findings suggest London will comfortably remain Europe's largest
financial center, at least in the short term, boosting supporters of
leaving the EU, who say the threat of job losses from one of Britain's
biggest industries was exaggerated.
Executives and politicians predicted a mass exodus of finance jobs from
London to rival centers in continental Europe after Britain voted to
quit the EU in the summer of 2016.
"The idea of London's demise was overdone because it will retain most of
the advantages that made it a great financial center," said Peter Hahn,
a professor of banking at the London Institute of Banking and Finance.
The September survey, which found that they planned to move or create
10,000 jobs on the continent by Brexit Day on March 29, 2019, was also
as at the lower end of estimates by industry lobby groups and financial
firms.
The Bank of England later validated the number.
The future of London as Europe's financial center is one of the biggest
issues in Brexit talks because it is Britain's largest export sector and
biggest source of tax. Rival cities within the bloc are battling to draw
highly-paid banking jobs and the revenues they bring.
International finance firms are building up operations in the EU to
ensure they can continue to serve clients if their London operations
lose the ability to operate across the bloc - known as the EU financial
"passport" - once Britain leaves.
The companies surveyed - the biggest or most internationally-focused
banks, insurers, asset managers, private equity firms and exchanges in
Britain - were responding to questions about their plans in the event of
a so-called "hard" Brexit, where the UK would leave not only the EU but
also the single market and Customs Union.
Britain and the EU agreed on March 19 to a transition period of 21
months to give time for talks on future trade ties. The deal eases
concerns about a hard Brexit but must still be approved by parliament in
a vote expected later this year.
Canvassing was conducted by email and telephone interviews between Feb.
9 and March 22, just shy of a year before Britain is due to leave.
A total of 164 firms were approached, and 119 participated versus 123 in
September. A handful of asset managers, exchanges and insurers who
responded in September didn't respond this time or declined to comment,
while a few insurers and asset managers were included for the first
time.
More than half of the companies surveyed told Reuters they would have to
move staff or restructure their businesses because of Brexit. Another
quarter said it would have no impact, and the remainder said they didn't
know or were still mulling over their plans.
SHRINKING PROJECTIONS
Several banks said they had scaled back their estimates since the last
survey was published.
Deutsche Bank, which had originally examined moving up to 4,000 staff
from London, will now initially shift less than 200 jobs, according to
the survey.
UBS plans to move 200 staff to Frankfurt from London after previously
indicating as many as 1,500 jobs would move, the survey shows.
Goldman Sachs, which had considered moving about 1,000 people, now
expects to move fewer than 500, it found.
The survey indicated 4,798 banking roles would be affected. Many of
those would be shifted out of the UK, but some would be new roles in
Europe, the executives surveyed said.
[to top of second column]
|
People walk through the financial district of Canary Wharf, London,
Britain 28 September 2017. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde
As in the previous survey, most respondents said bigger moves could
be in store in a decade or more, however.
"I doubt there will be a mass migration overnight, but my guess is
in 5, if not 10 years, London will be down quite a lot," said one
executive at a large U.S. bank, who asked not to be named because he
is not authorized to speak to the press.
"London was the only game in town, at least in Europe, and now it
won't be."
Twenty-five of the 40 banks who said they would make changes to
their business as a result of Brexit said they have taken steps such
as applying for licenses, hiring more office space elsewhere in
Europe or moving some contracts with clients to cities in the EU.
Only eight of the banks said they have started moving staff or
hiring employees locally to bolster their European operations
because of Brexit.
Most executives said moving staff or assets would be one of the last
steps they take in their relocation plans.
Although most firms responded before the transition deal was
announced, a question was included in the survey about how the firms
would cope in the event of such an agreement.
The majority of banks responded that it wouldn't make any difference
to their plans because it doesn't clarify anything and is still
vulnerable to any number of political scenarios, including the
potential collapse of May's government.
There was a small rise in the number of insurance companies planning
to move staff or create jobs overseas, according to the survey.
Insurance companies said they planned to move or create 173 jobs
overseas, up from 98 in the previous Reuters survey, and the asset
management sector plans to move 304 roles.
Previous forecasts for job losses in a hard Brexit scenario have
ranged from about 30,000 roles, estimated by the Brussels-based
Bruegel research group, to up to 75,000 by Oliver Wyman and as many
as 232,000 by the London Stock Exchange.
The timeframe in the Bruegel estimate was up to March 2020, the
Oliver Wyman forecast was up to 2022 and the London Stock Exchange's
was up to 2024.
In a surprise development, Paris has emerged as the biggest winner
in the fight for London-based banking jobs that may be moved to
cities in the EU after Brexit, the survey found.
France's capital is on course to gain 2,280 roles, the survey
showed.
The bulk of those are from HSBC, which continues to indicate it may
move 1,000 investment jobs despite comments by the head of its
investment bank last year that he expected fewer jobs to leave
because the chances of a hard Brexit were receding.
Many large finance companies were initially deterred by a perception
of France as a country of high taxes and strict labor laws,
according to executives.
But efforts by President Emmanuel Macron, a former investment
banker, to woo the industry by making it easier to hire and fire and
cutting taxes on salaries, wealth and capital income appeared to be
paying off.
Goldman Sachs, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley and HSBC were among
the firms that are planning to move at least some staff to Paris,
the survey shows.
Frankfurt was on course to win the second highest number of jobs
with 1,420 roles, followed by Dublin with 612 roles and 407 in
Luxembourg, the Reuters survey showed.
(Additional reporting by Suzanne Barlyn in New York, Stephen Jewkes
in Milan, Noor Zainab Hussain in Bengaluru and Jonathan Saul in
London; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |