Technology deal doldrums give bankers the job-hopping itch
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[June 22, 2023] By
Milana Vinn
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When a senior Goldman Sachs technology banker
delivered a grim prediction to his colleagues earlier this year, it
marked the beginning of downturn that would result in some bankers
leaving.
Mergers and acquisitions among technology companies could be down as
much as 80% in 2023, Sam Britton, one of the leaders of Goldman's global
technology, media and telecommunications group, wrote in an internal
memo in February, as an economic slowdown and a hostile anti-trust
environment weighed on dealmaking appetite.
Britton tried to boost morale, arguing that market conditions could
change quickly, according to sources who described the contents of the
memo. But the plunge in the deal pipeline prompted soul-searching and
job-hopping among investment bankers accustomed to a feast.
In the months that followed, a number of top technology bankers have
left firms such as Goldman, Bank of America and Barclays, often for
smaller peers such as Moelis & Co, Qatalyst Partners, Evercore, and
Jefferies Financial Group, according to interviews with more than a
dozen bankers and previous Reuters reporting.
The latter lured the bankers by promising a bigger payout for their
deals, often guaranteeing minimum compensation of millions of dollars
for two years, those interviewed said. They added that it was unusual
for so many senior bankers to jump ship in the space of a few weeks.
A Barclays spokesperson said the bank was confident in its plan to break
into the top five investment banks. Representatives of the other banks
either declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment.
Technology was the top sector for mergers and acquisitions for eight
consecutive quarters until the second quarter of 2022, when a bout of
inflation forced central banks to raise interest rates, weighing on tech
stock valuations.
Global deal volumes in the technology sector have dropped by more than
half so far this year, according to data from LSEG Deals Intelligence.
Investment bankers and headhunters say the talent flight could change
the competitive position of many banks when technology firms decide to
embark on big deals again.
"When the pay is less, bankers feel less committed to the bank they are
at. The cost of opportunity to switch is less," said Anthony Keizner,
managing partner at executive search firm Odyssey Search Partners.
Goldman has lost several high-ranking technology bankers this year,
including Nick Pomponi, former co-head of global software investment
banking who left for Evercore, Rob Chisholm, a partner who moved to
Qatalyst, and Troy Broderick, who was named chief operating officer of
Goldman's M&A business in May only to leave for Perella Weinberg
Partners.
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Raindrops hang on a sign for Wall Street
outside the New York Stock Exchange in Manhattan in New York City,
New York, U.S., October 26, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Barclays, which has struggled to retain bankers following a shake-up
in the management of its investment banking division, has lost at
least nine top technology bankers in recent weeks. They include
Laurence Braham, its former global chair of investment banking, and
Richard Hardegree, its head of technology M&A, who both moved to
UBS, and Steve Markovich, its former global co-head of software
investment banking, who left for Centerview.
Ron Eliasek, one of the software industry's top investment bankers,
left his post as global chairman of technology, media, and
telecommunications at Bank of America earlier this month to join
Jefferies.
In a big bet on technology dealmaking, Moelis & Co hired 46
technology bankers from SVB Securities, the investment banking arm
of failed Silicon Valley Bank, including Jason Auerbach who led the
team, a Moelis executive told an industry conference last week.
PAY GUARANTEES
In making the switch, many bankers forfeit the resources of big
banks that can help win clients, such as top brokerage coverage and
a balance sheet to fund deals, in exchange for a bigger cut of the
fees from the deals they put together.
Traditionally, smaller firms have been reluctant to offer investment
bankers guaranteed compensation, in order to have more of their pay
tied to performance. Yet some are now offering guaranteed pay of
between $2 million and $12 million over the first two years to poach
top talent, the bankers interviewed by Reuters said.
Alan Johnson, managing director of compensation consultancy Johnson
Associates, said that first-year guarantees were common practice in
the hiring of investment bankers, but second-year guarantee used to
be rare.
He added that bankers who leave big banks for smaller firms are
signing up for a bigger slice of a smaller pie, so clinching these
two-year guarantees eases the pressure on them to help grow the pie
as soon as they join.
"You get paid a higher percentage of revenue than in a big bank, but
you have to generate the revenue with perhaps less help," Johnson
said.
(Reporting by Milana Vinn in New York; Additional reporting by
Anirban Sen in New York; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Jamie
Freed)
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