London finance hub must compete outside Europe, says Barclays chief

Skyline view of the famous financial bank district of London at golden sunset hour. View includes skyscrapers, office buildings and beautiful dramatic sky. (Shutterstock)
Above: City of London, UK. Skyline view of the famous financial bank district of London at golden sunset hour. View includes skyscrapers, office buildings and beautiful dramatic sky. Left: Barclays’ CEO Jes Staley. Shutterstock/ Reuters/File Photo
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Updated 06 February 2021
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London finance hub must compete outside Europe, says Barclays chief

London finance hub must compete outside Europe, says Barclays chief
  • Brexit gives the UK the opportunity to define its own agenda, says Jes Staley

LONDON: London’s post-Brexit financial services industry must compete more with New York and Singapore rather than with leading EU centers, the head of British bank Barclays said.

“What London needs to be focused on is not Frankfurt or Paris, needs to be focused on New York and Singapore,” Jes Staley, an American banker who spent 30 years in senior roles at US financial services giant JPMorgan, added.

The UK’s powerhouse financial sector, which represents around 7 percent of the nation’s economy, should emerge stronger from Brexit, according to the CEO.

“Brexit gives the UK the opportunity to define its own agenda,” he said, adding that he do not feel there was any need for deregulation to achieve this end.

“And in defining that agenda around financial services, staying competitive with other markets outside of Europe is really what the government should be focused on — and I think that is what they are focusing on.”

Britain’s departure from the EU was finalized on Jan. 1.

The nation’s long-awaited Brexit trade deal with the EU, agreed over Christmas, did not, however, include the finance sector.

Brussels and London are aiming to seal a memorandum of understanding about financial services by March.

London’s financial sector is referred to as the City.




Barclays’ CEO Jes Staley. (Reuters file photo)

“What the UK needs and London needs, is to make sure that the City is one of the best places, whether (in terms of) regulation or law or language, or talent, that manages these flows of capital wealth,” Staley said.

“Brexit is more than likely on the positive side than on the negative side,” Staley told the BBC.

New York retained the top spot in a survey of global financial centers published in September by Global Financial Centers Index, with London strengthening its position in second.

While trading in euro shares and some derivatives has left for other European centers, including some to New York, since Brexit, no one European competitor has emerged as a dominant force in the EU and so London views New York, Shanghai, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore as its true rivals.

London dominates the world’s $6.6 trillion-a-day foreign exchange market, is the biggest center for international banking and the second largest fintech hub after the US.

“What the UK needs and London needs, is to make sure that the City is one of the best places, whether (it is in terms of) regulation or law or language, or talent,” Staley said.

Echoing other leading City of London figures, he cautioned, however, against a bonfire of regulation.

“I wouldn’t burn one piece of regulation,” added the boss of Barclays, which he said employs some 50,000 people in the UK, roughly 20,000 outside of the UK and 10,000 in the US.

“Some amount of capital has moved but London is still obviously the main center for Barclays .... there are some jobs that are going to Europe, that otherwise would have been in the UK, but it’s in the hundreds,” Staley added.