Goldman Sachs moves its top EMEA banker to Paris as the French capital challenges London’s finance crown

Pedestrians walk past the Eiffel Tower in Paris on April 12, 2024.
Pedestrians walk past the Eiffel Tower in Paris on April 12, 2024.
EMMANUEL DUNAND—AFP via Getty Images

Good morning.

The question of which city would take the crown as Europe’s financial hub from the City of London has gripped European capitals ever since Brexit spelled the end of London’s full integration in the European Union. If Goldman Sachs is the arbiter, it’s clear that Paris is the frontrunner. 

This week, the investment bank announced that its top European banker, Dirk Lievens, would trade London for Paris, and with the move, Goldman’s banking team in Paris would expand significantly.

The reason? “The whole financial ecosystem in Paris is enormous,” Lievens told me on the phone this morning, referring to France’s largest financial companies—BNP, AXA—and its (alternative) asset managers such as Amundi and fintech players like Worldline. Lievens estimates that about 25% of Europe’s financial players by market cap or assets under management are concentrated in Paris, a far larger share than any other continental European city.

Prior to Lievens’s move, several other managing directors in Goldman’s financial industry group had transferred to Paris, since Goldman’s EMEA strategy under CEO David Solomon has been “to go to where the clients are.” Several other Goldman offices in Europe—Frankfurt, Munich, Milan—have also mushroomed under the firm’s client-oriented strategy, becoming hubs for industrial, telecom, and natural resources clients.

Lievens’s arrival, the banker told me, signals that Goldman wants “to build a full pyramid in Paris, from junior to senior.”

“My move is symbolically and strategically important,” he said. Ideally, “a quarter to a third of our staff will be in Paris in the medium to longer term.”

The relocation of Goldman’s top banker is not an isolated event. Many of the largest global banks based in the U.S., including J.P. Morgan, Citi, and Bank of America, have recently expanded in Paris at the expense of London, attracted by more business-friendly policies under President Emmanuel Macron. Overall, 5,500 finance jobs recently moved from London to Paris.

While Paris will no doubt get another mini-boost from Goldman’s top banker’s embrace of it, London is still the barometer for Europe’s financial sector. Earlier this year, France backed London in its bid to remain the banking hub for euro-denominated trades. And even at Goldman, Lievens told me that “London will remain our largest hub by far” in EMEA.

More news below. 

Peter Vanham
peter.vanham@fortune.com
@petervanham

TOP NEWS

Boeing’s slow recovery

Boeing burned through $3.8 billion in cash in the first quarter of the year, as production and deliveries slow after January’s door plug blowout. Boeing shipped just 67 737s in Q1, compared to 113 for the same period last year. Managers now concede that Boeing tried to produce planes too quickly. Fortune

Meta volatility

Meta shares dropped by 15% in extended trading after CEO Mark Zuckerberg spent the company’s earnings call talking about long-term bets in metaverse and AI. The company admitted that capital expenditures could total $40 billion this year, at least $5 billion more than forecast. “This is likely going to take several years,” Zuckerberg said, as he appealed to investors to be patient. Fortune

McKinsey investigation

The U.S. Justice Department is investigating McKinsey for its role in fostering the opioid crisis. Officials are probing McKinsey’s advice to drugmakers like Purdue Pharma on how they could increase sales of drugs like OxyContin. The consulting company has already paid $1 billion to settle opioid-related lawsuits across the U.S. The Wall Street Journal

AROUND THE WATERCOOLER

JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon can’t shake the worry America is headed for a repeat of 1970s-style stagflation by Eleanor Pringle

Pharmaceutical giant Bayer’s manager cull will likely affect thousands of bosses—and the aspirin inventor thinks it will help its ‘brilliant’ Gen Z grads to thrive by Orianna Rosa Royle

Swedish-founded Tesla rival Polestar considers weaning itself off China as EU probe into BYD and owner Geely brings tariff threats by Ryan Hogg

The latest Supreme Court decision could throw a wrench into corporate DEI programs by Paige McGlauflin

LinkedIn CEO says galvanizing 18,000 employees to shift objectives to AI hasn’t been easy but they’ve worked to ‘create a movement around it’ by Fortune Editors

This edition of CEO Daily was curated by Nicholas Gordon. 

This is the web version of CEO Daily, a newsletter of must-read insights from Fortune CEO Alan Murray. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.