As we’re in the final countdown to the end of year celebrations, it’s a good moment to reflect on what’s happened in 2012 in banking.
If 2010, the mantra was all about banker’s bonuses, bank governance and bank risk; and 2011 was more about bankers not giving a damn about their customers or society; 2012 is the year we have seen governments, regulators and banks taking stock to change and, four years after the crash of 2008, we are seeing real change in banking.
In fact, there is radical change taking place from inside and out.
Outside, the regulatory frameworks are starting to kick-in with Dodd Frank, the European Market Infrastructure Regulation, Basel III and more changing bank thinking. The implication of a prop trading ban spreading from the USA to the other parts of the world is also changing thinking.
Add on heavy fines for money laundering, tax fraud and LIBOR, and banks are hurting.
Chart from Thomson Reuters blog
Finally, the mass investigation of insider trading that has seen top figures from firms you would not even imagine being dragged into this mire, such as McKinsey, and the world knows it has to change.
And it is changing.
For example, UBS has been fined on three occasions: $780 million for helping US citizens evade tax, $45 million for the losses created by rogue trader Kweku Adoboli and now anything up to $1.6 billion for LIBOR rigging. This is the same bank that got the greatest fines ever imposed on a bank in the early 2000’s for laundering money to Saddam Hussein (back then a stiff Fed fine was a mere $100 million) and you can see why.
The result is that the bank has had serious issues for years, with regular changes of CEO and Chairman and now a new direction to effectively become a pure wealth manager private bank.
That means the bank is laying off thousands of people – 10,000 to be exact – and shutting down its investment bank.
This is one of the firms that used to be proud
Barclays has pretty much said that it’s going back to its roots and shrinking its investment bank operations – rumours of 2,000 layoffs are imminent – and most banks involved in trading are reassessing their positions.
For example, the City has shrunk by a third over the last five years. In 2007, London’s financial services firms employed 354,000 people but, by 2012, the Centre for Economics and Business Research estimates that the City jobs total has fallen to 255,000 and predicts it will fall further soon.
Some of this is natural shrinkage, some relocation changes but much of it reflects the dour state of investment banking.
City pay rates are dropping fast, with the average managing directors of a City firm seeing their pay package fall by almost a third from £237,000 to £167,000, according to recruitment firm Astbury Marsden.
So this part of the world that used to be like a casino is now more like a Wild West, full of cowboys out to shoot each other.
The heady days of big bonuses, casino capitalism, easy money and easy life are over.
So maybe 2013 will finally be the year when we stop bashing bankers and start being a little bit more constructive about an industry that needed to change and appears to finally be doing so.
I agree - it would be good to see 2013 being the year when we see financial services get back on its feet. I always say, FS will always exist, its just who does it and how that matters. Market re structuring is fascinating, and technology is both the enabling and disruptive force.
Posted by: Nigel Woodward | December 18, 2012 at 08:06 AM