Infographic: Emerging Market Financial Centres on the Rise

New York and London are still on top, but the economic crisis has launched many more financial hubs.

(March 17, 2014) – The two traditionally largest financial centres are fighting each other for supremacy, but hubs in the developing world are quickly creeping up on them, data research has found.

A bi-annual survey, the Global Financial Centres Index run by data service Long Finance, this week showed cities in Brazil, South Korea, and the Middle East have been making steady progress since 2007.

The graph below shows that while New York and London (black and dark blue lines) tussle at the top, Sao Paulo, Buenos Aires, Kuala Lumpur, Riyadh, and Seoul (various colours) have shot up in the ranking of global financial centres.

The index uses a range of factors, including data from the World Bank along with transparency and compliance monitors, and interviews with investors and financial service employees working with and in the centres.

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How easy it is to employ skilled staff is one of the top factors considered when constructing the index, and can hike a city up or down the scale.

 As emerging and frontier markets have made efforts to train their workforce and opened their doors to investors and business alike, they have consequently risen up the index.

Few western or developed markets have made great strides in the index over the past six years, while many offshore jurisdictions have similarly plateaued.

Related content: Exotic Aspirations & Are Asset Owners Ignoring Emerging Market Concerns?

Finance Centres

AT&T Alternatives Pioneer Thomas Judge Dies

Thomas Judge, one of the first to invest pension assets in venture capital, has died at 83.

(March 17, 2014) — AT&T’s longtime and ground-breaking former head of alternatives has died at the age of 83. 

Thomas Judge lead the venture capital portfolio for the telecom giant’s pension fund from 1980 to 1995. He was one of the first institutional asset owners to allocate to the asset class. 

In his last few years with AT&T, Judge co-founded the Institutional Limited Partners Association. 

It began as “an informal networking club” with 15 to 20 members, according to its website, which offered an open forum for discussion and highly valued confidentiality. Now, the global organization boasts more than 300 member groups representing in excess of $1 trillion in assets.   

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Before establishing the pioneering industry group and institutional venture capital portfolio, Judge spent 17 years working in various employee benefits and investment positions at AT&T. 

He was named in the Private Equity Hall of Fame in 1995, the same year he retired from a decades-long career at AT&T. Other inductees included Georges Doriot, founder of the world’s first public venture capital firm, and Yale University, whose investment arm made private equity a core allocation for university endowments.  

Judge held an MBA from Seton Hall University in New Jersey, and spent the last 50 years of his life in the state.

He was remembered at service in Red Bank, New Jersey, on March 15, according to an announcement in the Ashbury Park Press.

“Tom was a pioneer in private investing and will be missed by all who were fortunate to work with him,” wrote Avneet Kochar, who led AT&T’s alternative assets portfolio from 2003 to 2012, in the announcement’s online guestbook. 

Related Content: Leadership Change at AT&T

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