Having acquired the Europe and Middle East operations of Lehman Brothers yesterday, the Japanese brokerage firm Nomura has decided to create a bonus pool of over one billion dollars to retain the employees of the battered American investment banker.
"Nomura agreed to put up the cash in a bid to retain the employees from equities and investment banking divisions of Lehman in Europe and the West Asia. The bonus pool (about Rs 4,500 crore) will be shared between the employees over two years," Financial Times reported today.
The Japanese financial services major has acquired parts of the European and Middle Eastern operations of Lehman for meagre two dollars.
According to the report quoting Nomura, the bank expected to retain a "significant proportion" of the 2,500 employees, although some would inevitably leave.
Quoting Sadeq Sayeed, Nomura's special adviser, the newspaper said: "Slavery was abolished a long time ago. We cannot control people in any other way apart from creating an environment which is conducive for them."
The report published in the online edition of the newspaper said that the news of Nomura's European deal comes just one day after it paid $225 million to clinch Lehman's Asian-Pacific franchise by defeating other interested parties including Barclays. The US bank has about 3,000 staff in Asia, half of which are located in Tokyo, it added.
The Financial Times said the acquisition of Lehman's European business would give Nomura the scale needed to compete with its larger international rivals with the aim of increasing its overseas revenues from 20 per cent to more than 30 per cent by 2011.