Birmingham Post

Brexit threat to financial jobs in West Midlands

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HUNDREDS of financial jobs in Birmingham could be at risk after Brexit, a new report warns.

Nearly two-thirds of Britain’s financial services roles are based outside London, laying bare the risks to thousands of regional jobs, the report by Square Mile group lobby group The City UK claimed.

It said 1.5 million of 2.2 million industry jobs are located outside the capital, with hubs like Birmingham, Bristol, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Manchester hosting more than 30,000 financial and related profession­al services workers each.

The City UK chief executive Miles Celic said: “Our report reinforces the value delivered by financial and related services to the whole of the UK economy.”

“Internatio­nal firms that come to Britain for business usually put down roots in London before expanding their operations across the country, creating a deeper talent pool of skilled workers that benefits both local and national businesses,” he added.

“Strong regional financial centres, like Edinburgh, Manchester and Birmingham, boost the attractive­ness of London as a global financial centre. Maintainin­g this ecosystem is critical to ensuring the UK remains a world-leading place to do business.”

Birmingham is home to 1,500 Deutsche Bank workers while US bank JP Morgan employs around 5,500 staff outside of London, including 300 in Edinburgh, 1,200 in Glasgow and 4,000 at its global technology and operations centre in Bournemout­h.

Glasgow also hosts 1,200 staff from Morgan Stanley, while Belfast hosts 2,000 Citibank staff.

Overall, more than 21 UK cities have over 10,000 people employed in the sector.

The report raises concerns over how Britain’s regions will be impacted by a post-Brexit exodus of banking, insurance, accounting jobs and related positions.

However, The City UK report said: “The extent to which these and other firms may change their UK-focused business plans in the wake of the UK’s vote to leave the EU will depend on firm-specific business models and so is likely to vary from company to company.”

Rival financial centres like Frankfurt, Dublin and Paris are expected to siphon off some of the City’s businesses, ahead of the expected loss of passportin­g rights as part of a hard Brexit.

Passportin­g rights allow UK-based financial services to trade across the bloc without needing to apply for licences in each member state. HSBC has said it is on course to move 1,000 jobs from its London office to France, while around 4,000 of JP Morgan’s 16,000 UK staff could be shifted abroad, though a potential location has yet to be revealed.

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