Back to Zoom: Omicron weighs on investment bankers'
hustle
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[January 12, 2022] By
Anirban Sen and David French
(Reuters) - Investment bankers who rushed
to court clients in person after COVID-19 vaccines became available last
year have been forced to cancel such gatherings at the start of 2022 as
the Omicron variant rages.
Bankers say the impact on dealmaking will not be as severe as 2020, when
the pandemic started and global mergers and acquisitions (M&A) activity
fell to a three-year low. They expect the new surge to be short-lived
and they have become accustomed to putting together deals virtually
through online platforms such as Zoom.
Some fret, however, about losing the chance to cultivate relationships
with executives socially. The timing is also poor for bankers hoping to
win new assignments, as many large corporations review strategic changes
at the beginning of the year.
"My motto has always been, if I'm not in front of my clients, someone
else is. But I think this is just a different time. If people want to
travel, and they are comfortable doing it, and they take precautions,
I'm allowing people," said Drew Goldman, global head of investment
banking coverage & advisory at Deutsche Bank AG.
Most of corporate America and Wall Street have asked employees not to
come to the office this month, as COVID-19 cases in the United States
repeatedly break new daily records. The vaccines have helped prevent
hospitalizations and deaths, but infections have surged with the Omicron
variant.
Other industries from healthcare to airlines to retail have been hit
hard by Omicron. The World Bank on Tuesday cut its forecasts for
economic growth in the United States, the Euro area and China and warned
that new coronavirus variants and other factors threatened the recovery
in developing economies.
JPMorgan Chase & Co, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Morgan Stanley and other
big banks have encouraged staff to work from home to limit the spread of
the virus. Some, such as Citigroup Inc, have gone further, implementing
a "no jab, no job" policy to push employees to get fully vaccinated --
barring employees who receive an accommodation or exemption.
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Flags fly outside 85 Broad St., the Goldman Sachs headquarters in
New York's financial district, January 20, 2010. REUTERS/Brendan
McDermid
Many in-person meetings with bankers have been canceled by the companies
themselves, according to interviews with six investment bankers who
discussed the matter on condition that they and their clients are not
identified. Some bankers have also canceled meetings on their own
initiative.
It is a u-turn from last year, when bank CEOs, including JPMorgan's
Jamie Dimon, Goldman Sachs' David Solomon and Morgan Stanley's James
Gorman, urged bankers to use private corporate jets, if needed, to
travel and meet clients.
Banks put on lavish dinners and wine-soaked meet-and-greets for clients.
Some even rewarded staff with bonuses based on the number of clients
they met.
It paid off. The value of M&A globally topped $5 trillion for the first
time ever in 2021, according to Dealogic.
As with when the pandemic emerged in 2020, the toll is heaviest on young
bankers, who learn their trade and develop contacts by working alongside
and traveling with senior colleagues. The social distancing restrictions
make it challenging for them to evolve from footsoldiers to rainmakers.
Given the Omicron wave's rapid pace, bankers are hoping to be back in
the office and on the road come February.
"We have the chance to kind of go back to more normalcy, hopefully, in
the next couple of weeks," said Deutsche's Goldman.
(Reporting by Anirban Sen in Bengaluru and David French in New York;
Editing by David Gregorio)
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