A year after Brexit, the EU’s finance hubs are taking shape. Bloomberg reporters look at the merits of Paris, Frankfurt, Dublin, Amsterdam and Milan.
In Paris, JPMorgan Chase & Co. has worked out of an exquisite
18th-century hotel particulier on the Place Vendome for the last 105
years. If you want an idea of how Brexit is transforming the landscape
of Europe’s finance industry you should pop around the back.
Before
Britain quit the European Union, JPMorgan’s Paris HQ was a relative
backwater with about 250 staff. Thanks to the shift of EU banking out of
London it expects to have 800 by the end of next year. Most remarkable,
according to workers there, is that the Wall Street giant has pretty
much added a whole new business line to its French HQ: Trading and
sales.
To make room for all those traders, the firm has
acquired a seven-floor modern extension behind the old building that
looks out onto the terraced restaurants of the Place du Marche Saint
Honore. Not as charming as the front entrance but proof of a serious investment banking operation.
It’s a symbol of how Paris has become the EU’s
No.1 financial trading hub. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. has more than
tripled its local headcount since the Brexit vote. Bank of America Corp.
has gone from 83 staff in 2017 to about 500 now.
But as we approach the first anniversary of Britain’s EU departure
there’s a broader trend at play here, too — one that’s potentially more
threatening to the City of London. While Paris is winning the fight for
lucrative trading jobs, other places such as Frankfurt, Dublin and
Amsterdam are emerging as EU financial hubs in their own right, just for
different specialisms.
Bloomberg
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