The Champions League of investment banking
How we calculated the investment banking Champions League table
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Manager: Stan O'Neal Age: 55 Appointed: 2002 Value added: 23.7% pa (6th) Chop rating: 1/5
ONeal is the man who rescued Merrill Lynch from its dark days at the turn of the century, and his job is safe in the medium term. But will shareholders start to protest if its share price continues to lag behind the likes of Lehman and Goldman? |
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Star players: Andrea Orcel. The man who made Merrill a force in the European M&A business. Stans a huge fan and may want to build his team of the future round Orcel
Rising star: Osman Semerci. Still in his 30s, Semerci has been given responsibility for all of Merrills global markets business and even persuaded his bosses to let him continue to be based in London
Weakest link: Trading. Whether its in fixed income or foreign exchange, word on the street is that Merrill lags behind its competitors on the trading front |
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Key transfers 2006:
IN: Nick Chavdarov (head of emerging markets structured credit, from Deutsche Bank); Jeffrey Culpepper (head of global markets and investment banking for the Middle East and North Africa, from Deutsche Bank); Jon Pratt (head of debt capital markets, Asia-Pacific, from Credit Suisse)
OUT: Andrew Chulak (head of M&A for CEMA, to Deutsche Bank); Harry Lengsfield (head of interest rate products and foreign exchange); Doug De Martin (head of equity and debt sales); Jeff Kronthal (head of principal investments) |
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2006 capital markets performance (▼/▲ 2005)
Overall fees: $3,757mln (+26.1%) 5th (▲1) DCM: $1,349.8mln (+23.2%) 4th (no move) ECM: $1,127mln (+32.1%) 5th (no move) M&A: $1,280.4mln (+24.2%) 6th (▼1) FX market share: 3.68% (-2.01%) 9th (▼3)
Rankings 2006:
Return on equity: 19.7% (11th) Growth of earnings: 38% (7th) Market cap: $82.3 bln (11th)
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Champions League position 2006: 7th If Merrill were a Champions League team it would be: Liverpool. Tough new coach quickly got results and restored a great club to some of its former glory. But recent tinkering could lead to disaffection among playing staff, and not yet the superpower of old |