Family Office
Indian WMs looking to ramp up despite tough times

Subcontinent's wealth managers find themselves in buyer's market
for talent. India-based wealth managers are bucking a trend of
layoffs in the financial-service arena. Taking advantage of
lowered compensation expectations, firms such as Bank Sarasin
Alpen, EFG Private Bank, Birla Sunlife, Religare Macquarie,
Credit Suisse and Barclays Wealth are beating the bushes for
qualified private-client personnel.
"At an industry level, the cost of acquiring wealth management
talent has come down by 25-30% compared to peak levels in 2007,"
Ankit Bansal, CEO of Mumbai-based Sapphire Human Solution s told
the Gurgaon, India-based Economic Times this week.
Looking for guidance
Religare-Macquarie, a year-old joint venture between Sydney,
Australia-based financial-service company Macquarie Group and
Delhi, India-based securities brokerage Religare, plans to add
180 wealth managers across India in the near term. Birla Sunlife,
a tie-in between Mumbai-based industrial giant Aditya Birla and
Toronto-based insurer Sun Life, has already hired 50 sales people
and plans to add 100 more. London-based Barclays Wealth is
planning to bring in 100 new employees before the end of February
2009. Meanwhile Basel-based private bank Sarasin Alpen is gearing
up to recruit India-based staff in aid of a home-based initiative
to serve expatriate Indians.
If anything, the global-market downturn has prompted affluent
Indians -- who might have been content to rely on "social and
professional contacts" for advice on investing in less turbulent
times -- to turn to "wealth managers, both to grow their
investments and [to] protect their wealth," says Satyanarayan
Bansal, head of Barclays' Indian private-client business.
Meanwhile, cut-backs in other areas of Indian financial service
and the return of former expatriate wealth-managers who have been
down-sized abroad has eased a shortage of talent and put hirers
in the driver's seat for the first time in several years.
-FWR
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