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The Citi group logo on a bank branch in New York. Citi is moving its European trading hub to Frankfurt, Germany, in the wake of Brexit while maintaining its headquarters in London. Photo: AFP

Citigroup chooses Frankfurt as new trading hub for Europe in wake of Brexit

Brexit

Citigroup has settled on Frankfurt as its newest trading hub in the European Union and plans to present that option to its board of directors this week for approval, according to a person with knowledge of the decision.

The choice to expand the bank’s existing broker-dealer in the German city means it will create between 150 and 250 new roles there, said the person, who asked not to be identified talking about internal policies. It’s yet to be decided if the jobs will be filled by moving existing employees or by hiring locally, and it’s likely to be some combination, the person said.

The location, where Citigroup already has about 350 employees, is expected to handle some of the trading activities currently done in London, though the UK capital will remain the headquarters for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, the person said.

Citigroup has been considering the move for months after the UK voted last year to leave the EU. The firm was evaluating locations in Ireland, Spain, Italy, Germany, France, and the Netherlands, Jim Cowles, the bank’s top executive for the region, said at a Dublin conference in January.

Traders work in front of the German share price index, DAX board, at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany. Citigroup is moving its European trading hub to the German city. Photo: Reuters

Last November, the firm was in discussions with BaFin, the German regulator that’s seen by many as the only regulator outside of London capable of handling the banks’ complicated derivatives business, about moving some of its London-based equity and interest-rate derivatives traders to Frankfurt. The lender is also in discussions with the European Central Bank and regulators in EU nations including Ireland about relocating other parts of its operations.

Frankfurt is a natural pick for many international firms given a financial ecosystem featuring Deutsche Bank AG, the ECB and BaFin. Even as the chance remains for a UK deal maintaining some sort of access to the single market, banks are preparing for the worst and want to have new or expanded offices up and running inside the bloc before the UK formally departs in 2019.

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