Business Day

Financial services firms shift 7,500 jobs from UK to EU

- Viren Vaghela

Financial services firms operating in the UK have shifted about 7,500 employees and more than £1.2-trillion in assets to the EU ahead of Brexit with more likely to follow in coming weeks, according to EY.

About 400 relocation­s were announced in the past month alone, the consulting firm said on Thursday in a report that tracks 222 of the largest financial firms with significan­t operations in the UK. Since Britain voted in 2016 to leave the bloc, the finance industry has added 2,850 positions in the EU, with Dublin, Luxembourg and Frankfurt seeing the biggest gains.

From 2021, firms in Europe s

financial capital will lose their passport to offer services across the EU. They will have to rely on the bloc granting the UK equiv

alence for them to do business

with customers in the region, who account for up to a quarter of all revenue in London. With the EU far from certain to grant that access, firms have to beef up their continenta­l presence.

As we fast approach the end

of the transition period, we are seeing some firms act on the final phases of their Brexit planning, including relocation­s,” said Omar Ali, UK financial services managing partner at EY. This is

despite the pandemic and consequent restrictio­ns to the movement of people.” Many firms were still in a wait and

see mode, and a flurry of moves

could follow soon, said Ali.

JPMorgan has moved assets and staff in recent weeks, while Goldman Sachs has planned for an extra 100 people to move to Europe.

Such shifts are well short of some estimates made since the Brexit vote.

Think-tank Bruegel said in 2018 that London could eventually lose 10,000 banking jobs and 20,000 roles in the financial services industry while former London Stock Exchange chief Xavier Rolet said that the figure might reach 232,000 jobs.

The EY report said that as many as 24 financial services firms said they would transfer assets out of the UK amid uncertaint­y about the City of London s

continued access to the bloc.

For now, London still accounts for the lion s share of

US banks assets in Europe.

Wall Street s five big firms

underpinne­d their UK units with $136bn of core capital at the end of 2019, while the figure for the EU was $45bn. But more transfers are expected within months.

WE ARE SEEING SOME FIRMS ACT ON THE FINAL PHASES OF THEIR BREXIT PLANNING

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