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It’s a tough time to be an investment banker in Southeast Asia now

makapaaa

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http://sgfuck.org/mybb/Thread-Be-a-Banker?page=18

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[TD] http://sgfuck.org/mybb/images/mobile/posted_0.gif Post: #174
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Elite Junior

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[TD] Yes be a banker, that is if you can find a bank that will hire one. http://sgfuck.org/mybb/images/smileys_yahoo/laughing.gif


Quote:It’s a tough time to be an investment banker in Southeast Asia.

Singapore, the region’s biggest stock market, is having its driest spell in six years with no initial public offering bigger than $25 million in 2015. Mergers involving Southeast Asian companies have dropped 45 percent this year to the lowest level since 2009, bucking a 39 percent rise in the broader Asia Pacific. Adding to the woes, more than a fifth of all acquisitions, or $43 billion worth, announced in the past 12 months were scrapped, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

The dearth of mergers, down to $20 billion, is taking a toll on bankers. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has reduced its investment-banking team in Singapore about 30 percent, while HSBC Holdings Plc’s top equity capital markets banker in the region and the merger heads at Bank of America Corp. and UBS Group AG are departing. Companies are reluctant to do deals or go public in the wake of low commodity prices that have curtailed growth in Southeast Asian economies including Malaysia and Indonesia.

“The mood on the street is very dismal,” said Nicholas Teo, a Singapore-based strategist at CMC Markets. “In Southeast Asia, the big companies and tycoons have been sitting on the sidelines.”

Representatives for Bank of America, HSBC and UBS declined to comment.

“While our Southeast Asia strategy and client coverage model remains unchanged, we do expect activity levels to be challenged,” Tim Leissner, chairman for Southeast Asia at Goldman Sachs, said by e-mail. Leissner said Goldman Sachs sees opportunities from the consolidation of Vietnamese and Indonesian banks.

Richest Man
Falling oil prices earlier this year helped undo several announced deals. CIMB Group Holdings Bhd. in January terminated a $20 billion three-way merger that would have formed Malaysia’s biggest banking group, citing unfavorable economic conditions following the plunge in oil prices. The same day, Sona Petroleum Bhd. abandoned a proposed $281 million investment in Thai energy assets.

Another withdrawn deal involved Thailand’s richest man, Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi, who in February abandoned plans to buy control of Singapore builder United Engineers Ltd. after failing to reach agreement on price.

Last month Malaysia scrapped a plan to seek buyers for the $3 billion power arm of state investment company 1Malaysia Development Bhd., reversing course just a week after saying it appointed a bank to field interest in the assets. No reason was given. It will now pursue a long-delayed IPO of the business.

DBS Group Holdings Ltd., Southeast Asia’s largest lender, sees “no immediate prospect” for acquisitions, Chief Executive Officer Piyush Gupta told reporters April 27 in Singapore. Malaysia asked state-owned companies to put overseas dealmaking on hold to reduce fund outflows, the Malaysian Insider reported in January, citing a government circular.

“There was certainly a sense of optimism three to four years ago, when both local and international banks were hiring aggressively,” said Nick Gardiner, a Hong Kong-based managing director at Boston Consulting Group. “They probably didn’t see the kind of activity levels they were hoping for.”

Tough Market
Firms led by Standard Chartered Plc and Macquarie Group Ltd. have eliminated about 400 investment-banking jobs across Asia since the start of the year, according to Boston Consulting Group estimates. More cuts could come if deal flow continues to slow, Gardiner said.

“The market is tough,” said Peter Cheng, a former Standard Chartered technology banker in Singapore who now runs a Vietnamese property website. “I know a lot of people who left banking who are facing challenges in looking for other positions.”
One bright spot has been Thailand, which hosted Jasmine Broadband Internet Infrastructure Fund’s $1.7 billion February share sale. That accounted for more than half of IPO fundraising in Southeast Asia this year. The only other IPO above $500 million in the region was last month’s $770 million share sale from Malaysian power producer Malakoff Corp., Bloomberg data show.

Interest Rates
Singapore’s IPO activity has been hurt by an anticipated rise in interest rates. That dents the appeal of property trusts, which typically comprise many of the new offerings there, said Kelvin Ho, Nomura Holdings Inc.’s head of Southeast Asia investment banking.
Only two companies sold shares in the city-state this year, raising a combined $33 million, down from $721 million a year earlier, and both have slumped from their offer prices. Singapore Exchange Ltd. is trying to court mining companies, develop closer ties with China and attract IPO candidates from overseas as part of a goal to double the market value of companies listed there within five years.
There’s little hope for deal activity to pick up this year, said Alan Richardson, a Hong Kong-based money manager at Samsung Asset Management Co., which oversees about $112 billion.

“The growth outlook in Southeast Asia is weakening and there’s uncertainly over the global economy,” he said.​
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Only by voting the PAP can you upturn the downturn.
 
These bankers are too used to coming work at 10am then leaving at 5pm in their ferraris or bmws. Now is repay time
 
If even bankers are having problems, how can the PAP justify their ridiculously high pay :confused:

Nowadays when I visit down town I notice that it is not crowded & the shoppers are just looking & not buying.
 
These bankers are too used to coming work at 10am then leaving at 5pm in their ferraris or bmws. Now is repay time

Bankers are survivors. You are fine, so long you know how to create a greater shit to bail out the previous shit.

There is a one-hit-wonder ED (above SVP) from DBS who got big promotions after Hyflux's listing years ago. After that, he got so arrogant and offended many of DBS's best corporate clients. During one of my sessions with him, he was busy gaming on his phone during the meeting. He drives a bigger car than his superior and his greatest priority is about educating his interns about buying his favourite kopi.

In the end, this jerk keeps his rice bowl by collaborating grant cashflow to failing companies which his associates has a stake in. His wife is in another local bank so they happily pass around the bad debts between both of their portfolios. Life is quite easy if you are willing to be evil.
 
These bankers are too used to coming work at 10am then leaving at 5pm in their ferraris or bmws. Now is repay time

wonderful news. these lazy scumbags cheats deserve to be fired and be taxi drivers. years of cheating like lehman bros fiasco and pinnacles high notes scandals are just tip of ice berg. I have no pity when I hear a banker getting fired. in fact felt very good.
 
With less than two weeks to go before new borrowing limits kick in on Jun 1, the low application rate for a repayment scheme set up to help overextended borrowers has led to concerns among observers and some Members of Parliament (MPs) that a sizeable number could turn to more desperate measures after the banks suspend their credit facilities.

Already, pawnshops and moneylenders say they are seeing better business since the limits were announced last month.

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/low-take-up-rate-of/1864316.html
 
Expect massive layoffs in the banking sector when the next GFC hits which should start this coming Q4 2015.

Sorry, no more government bailouts next time around. It will be bail-ins and mass layoffs.

Good-luck to all the Sinkies currently working in the banking sector as your good days are literally numbered!
 
Expect massive layoffs in the banking sector when the next GFC hits which should start this coming Q4 2015.

HSBC to slash up to 25,000 jobs globally
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/business/hsbc-to-slash-up-to-25/1902518.html
HSBC declined comment when asked how the layoffs will affect Singapore. HSBC employs over 3,000 people in Singapore where it offers a wide range of banking services from retail banking and wealth management to insurance and capital market services.
 
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