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Brexit: Ex-Barclays boss sees London jobs moving to New York

Bob Diamond predicts London will lose legal jobs alongside financial services to New York

Renee Bonorchis
Friday 08 September 2017 08:04 BST
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Bob Diamond, architect of Barclays investment bank arm, believes Brexit will benefit New York at London's expense
Bob Diamond, architect of Barclays investment bank arm, believes Brexit will benefit New York at London's expense (AP)

Bob Diamond, the architect of Barclays investment bank over more than a decade in London, said the capital will be hurt more than people expect from Brexit, with lawyers likely to join bankers in moving away.

“People are beginning to understand Brexit is going to be far more profound and long-lasting than they thought,” Mr Diamond said in a phone interview from New York on Thursday.

“I’d be very surprised if support services and legal services don’t move.”

Mr Diamond, who now chairs African bank investor Atlas Mara, said he expects New York will benefit at London’s expense.

Britain’s decision to leave the European Union has global banks establishing new bases within the trading bloc, to ensure continued access to clients in the region.

Some observers have said that given fragmentation between European trading centres, certain activities are more likely to gravitate to the bigger bulk of the US financial capital.

Mr Diamond’s comments contrast with a more upbeat take on Brexit from one of his successors as chief executive of Barclays.

Jes Staley, an American who has run the bank since the end of 2015, has been adamant that London will remain a financial hub, and has championed the city’s financial-technology scene as a source of jobs that will offset those leaving town.

Still, he has picked Dublin for Barclays’s post-Brexit expanded EU base.

Goldman Sachs said on Thursday that it could increase its Frankfurt staffing as much as four-fold after Brexit, while Morgan Stanley, Citigroup and UBS are also all relocating jobs to Germany’s financial capital.

As for Atlas Mara, which trades in London, Mr Diamond said his firm will benefit as global banks lower their exposure to emerging markets because of capital controls and regulation. Atlas Mara’s opportunities to boost market share have never been better, he said, and it plans to have a presence in 10 or more African countries in the next three to five years, up from the current seven.

It also has a treasury and markets unit based in Dubai.

Earlier, Atlas Mara reported that first-half net income to June rose to a record $11.5m (£8.7m) from $1.2m a year earlier. Its share price has rebounded 36 per cent in 2017 after sliding 82 per cent between its initial public offering in 2013 and the end of last year, as commodity prices and local currencies slumped.

Its biggest investment is a stake in Union Bank of Nigeria.

“We’ve delivered what we promised,” Mr Diamond said, adding that Atlas Mara is on track to more than double 2016’s full-year profit.

Bloomberg

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