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Bear Stearns employees flood Wall Street rivals with resumes

NEW YORK
Sun Apr 6, 2008 5:52pm EDT
File photo shows the Wall Street street sign outside the New York Stock Exchange in New York February 28, 2007. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bear Stearns employees are flooding Wall Street with their resumes as the firm is acquired by rival JPMorgan Chase, but the job market looks bad, investment bankers and recruiters said.

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On Friday, JPMorgan announced its first top-level management jobs since the banks initially reached their agreement to merge on March 16. Of 26 executives named to executive positions in the investment banking and trading division, only five are from Bear Stearns.

Business line executives will announce the next level of management decisions by mid-April, but many Bear Stearns employees aren't waiting that long.

Options Group, a financial recruitment and consulting firm, started getting resumes from Bear employees "the Sunday the $2 share offer was announced," said Michael Karp, its chief executive. "We started seeing flow in Asia right away. All night we were seeing flow from Europe."

"All investment banks and commercial banks have interviewed people from the investment bank in Bear Stearns," he added.

Options Group is getting about 10 to 15 resumes a day globally even now from Bear Stearns employees, including investment bankers, he said.

JPMorgan by far is the bigger bank, with 180,000 employees worldwide, including 26,000 in investment banking and trading. Bear Stearns, the fifth-largest investment bank before it nearly collapsed last month, has 14,000 in all. Job losses are expected at both.

One banker at a rival firm said resumes have been coming in from not just current Bear employees, but also business school graduates whose offers to join Bear had been rescinded.

The banker said most of the resumes he was getting were from junior to mid-level Bear Stearns bankers.

The investment banking businesses of the two companies overlap and Bear Stearns employees are preparing for the worst, said one Bear employee, who requested anonymity.

But these people face the tough task of finding jobs in a bad market. The global credit crunch and a slowing U.S. economy have led to tens of thousands of job cuts on Wall Street in recent months.

"They are coming into a market at a time when Wall Street doesn't offer much opportunity," said John Challenger, chief executive of employment consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

There may still be a few options for at least some of the bankers.

"Selectively we are seeing demand from hedge funds, where we are seeing people who are looking for private equity-type bankers to come in and help them grow their businesses," Options Group's Karp said. "Smaller investment banks and boutique banks are looking for people selectively."

JPMorgan plans to give employees from both companies who lose their jobs access to career placement services, a person briefed on the matter said.

"We are going to work with competitors -- which we have never done before -- private equity, hedge funds, asset managers and corporate clients -- of which we have some 13,000 -- to try to help them find jobs," the source said. "We hope that helps ease the pain a bit because nobody feels good about this."

(Editing by Gary Hill)



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