EU access and Macron’s tax cuts entice Millennium and Citadel; Talented French graduates are another big pull for U.S. firms
Back in 2016, trying to get an ambitious young financier to choose France over Britain was an often hopeless task.
“When
I was going to London to tell people to relocate to Paris, the answer
of my contacts was, ‘Paris, never!’” says Arnaud de Bresson, whose job
is to promote his city as an attractive location for international
finance firms.
Six years later de Bresson’s mission has become a whole lot easier.
Brexit has left many U.S. investment banks and
hedge funds hunting for a new base in the European Union, now that the
City of London is outside the bloc, and Paris is emerging as a No.1 destination. At the same time, President Emmanuel Macron has cut taxes for the wealthy, removing one of the biggest deterrents for high earners thinking about working in France.
The effect of both these things has been striking. Wall Street banks have been expanding
their French trading teams rapidly. Now hedge funds are following,
enticed by the abundant supply of clever mathematicians and engineers
from France’s elite universities. Millennium Management, Ken Griffin’s
Citadel and ExodusPoint Capital are all hiring or opening offices in Paris.
This sudden burst of activity begs the question
of whether the City of Light will become the EU’s main hub for hedge
fund traders, as well as for their investment bank counterparts. As Anne-Sophie d’Andlau, cofounder of Paris-based CIAM Investment, asks: “Can Paris become the Mayfair of Europe?”
London’s
affluent Mayfair and St James’s district, host to Britain’s thriving
hedge fund industry, needn’t worry too much yet. Most of the new Paris
hires are either local recruits or French expats transferring home. The
U.K. capital’s finance industry, which employs about 418,000 people, dwarfs its French rival.
Nonetheless, the hedge funds’ Paris commitments look serious.
New York-based Millennium has leased some space
in the RTL radio station’s old headquarters on Rue Bayard -- just around
the corner from the gleaming luxury stores of Avenue Montaigne -- which
could house as many as 100 staff. Citadel made several star hires last year, with more portfolio managers joining in 2022, a person familiar with the plan said.
ExodusPoint,
which set up a Paris research desk in 2019, wants to recruit more
locals once it gets regulatory approvals, people familiar say. Other
firms, including Point72, Qube Research & Technologies and Squarepoint Capital are advertising jobs in the city. Spokespeople for Millennium, Citadel and ExodusPoint declined to comment for this story.
President des Riches
Macron’s
tax cuts are a huge draw for hedge funds. “The game changer was the
fiscal reforms that put France and Paris at the average level in Europe,
at a level playing field,” says de Bresson, managing director of Paris Europlace, a finance industry lobby group.
Since
taking power in 2017, the president has enacted a string of tax changes
aimed at letting France seize post-Brexit opportunities to win new
business. In addition to cutting corporate tax from
33.33% to 25%, he replaced the tax on individual wealth with a
real-estate levy. He also introduced a flat tax on income from interest,
dividends and share sales.
These policies carry a political cost as Macron approaches a springtime reelection campaign. He’s regularly accused of being “president of the rich,” with some studies showing that his reforms have favored wealthier parts of society.
But his economic record is solid overall, with jobless claims falling to decade lows recently and gross domestic product rising more than expected at the end of 2021. He’s leading in the polls: Bookmakers put his chances at 72%.
And
his reforms have worked for the finance industry. “We think Paris is
the most attractive option among other European cities,” says d’Andlau,
who also credits the country’s “impatriation” regime, which offers eight years of generous tax exemptions for people moving there.
Grandes Ecoles
France, already the EU’s biggest supplier
of asset management services, also offers “a pool of talent like no
other country in continental Europe,” says Christophe Leclercq, an
executive search consultant at Shadowhound Ltd.
With its deep bench of traders and financial
engineers who graduated from the renowned Ecole Polytechnique or Ecole
Centrale -- and who contributed to the creation of highly complex
structured products at French banks Societe Generale SA and BNP Paribas SA -- France has long been a hunting ground for recruiters at the world’s biggest funds....
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