Asian Banking & Finance (July - September 2023)

Page 27

BANK RANKINGS: HONG KONG

John Mullally

OCBC Wing Hang logged the biggest increase in its workforce in 2022, expanding its staff by over 400 people (Photo by Ruayime R OansGunmam via Wikimedia Commons)

“Over the last nine months, it’s definitely slowed down. And then over three months [in 2023], it slowed even further, especially in the wake of happenings in the global investment banking market,” said John Mullally, Robert Walters’ managing director for Hong Kong and South China. Investment banking layoffs have hit the shores of Hong Kong, although not as much as New York and London. Mullally, in particular, noticed an amount of layoffs at the senior level positions. “What was seen during the global financial crisis were huge swathes of bankers losing their jobs. We are definitely seeing some layoffs, especially at the senior levels, which are more visible, more noticeable,” Mullally said, adding that whilst there are no “formal” hiring freeze announcements, there was definitely an “informal hiring freeze [or] less hiring activity in general.” Instead of hiring, banks are focused on maximizing the productivity of their workforce. Olga Yung, managing director at Michael Page Hong Kong, said that the majority of companies and hiring managers have as their key priority the improvement of cost efficiency and productivity in 2023. “This is a common theme across a variety of sell side players regardless of size,” Yung told Asian Banking & Finance via exclusive correspondence. RMs, tech roles still in demand Whilst hiring has slowed down due to overall weak market sentiment and negative news

coming out in relation to various banks, there are still some roles that are in demand for banks. “Across the sell side, mid to back office operations, compliance risk, finance and audit are constantly in demand for talent,” Yung said. Private bankers and relationship managers from retail banks are also sought after. “If you're a relationship manager who can bring in assets, who can move clients, there's still a demand for that. But outside of that, [the demand] is not particularly active,” Mullally said. Banks are also still looking into hiring quality developers and programmers, as this is a shallow talent pool in Hong Kong, he added. In 2022, ESG and crypto are two “hot topics” in hiring according to

Olga Yung

Banks are focused on maximising the productivity of their workforce

Yung. ESG remains a hot talking point, but candidates will need relevant exposure to be considered in these positions. “Before [the] crypto winter arrived, anyone who had experience or interest in crypto is a prospective candidate to the countless digital asset players which have emerged in the market over the recent few years. We saw high levels of hiring and interview activities across the majority of 2022, until the last quarter,” Yung said. Too little, too late In 2022, the strict travel rules reportedly drove bankers and experts away from Hong Kong. Hong Kong has since lifted its strict travel restrictions, but the effect is unfortunately nil. “It definitely increased confidence in the market. The problem is, it happened after the financial services and the investment banking markets really slowed down hiring because of the broader geopolitical challenges in the world and broader economic challenges, such as the looming threat of a global recession,” Mullally said. “The lifting of the quarantine was very much welcome for Hong Kong as a place for employers and employees. But the challenge now is that not many financial services firms are hiring and they’re certainly not hiring near the level that they hired in 2021,” he added.

HSBC remains the bank with the largest workforce in Hong Kong (Photo source: HSBC official website)

ASIAN BANKING & FINANCE | Q3 2023 25


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Articles inside

RICKY KAPUR Banking on customer experience

2min
pages 34-35

Maybank’s YES fuels tech-driven growth of small businesses

2min
pages 33-34

CASE STUDY: LIVI BANK Hong Kong’s livi bank launches gamechanging app for SMEs

2min
page 32

CASE STUDY: OCBC ECO-CARE LOAN One in five of OCBC’s home, renovation, and car loans are now green

2min
pages 30-31

BANK RANKINGS: HONG KONG

1min
page 27

BANK RANKINGS: HONG KONG Job losses loom in Hong Kong banks as focus turns to productivity

3min
pages 26-27

BANK RANKINGS: SINGAPORE

1min
page 23

Singapore banks champion employee well-being, upskilling

3min
pages 22-23

APAC Japanese banks’ assets drop as China thrives

2min
page 20

FINANCIAL INSIGHTS: AT-1

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page 19

FINANCIAL INSIGHTS: AT-1 SG banks strong and stable despite uncertain AT-1 issuance market – experts

3min
pages 18-19

Maybank’s Alvin Lee reveals changes in investment behaviour, wealth preservation

6min
pages 16-17

CEO INTERVIEW

2min
page 14

CEO INTERVIEW

1min
page 13

CEO INTERVIEW Bank of the Philippine Islands’ President talks reinvention and digital ambitions

3min
pages 12-13

What is the future of fintech funding in 2023?

3min
pages 10-11

Why Malaysian banks will never build a superapp

2min
page 9

PH banks snub growing middle class market

1min
page 8
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