Abstract

This paper uses the financial and economic downturn widely dated back to summer 2007 to develop understandings of financial elites in London's international financial district. Drawing on empirical research conducted into fee earning investment bankers and social scientific research into elites and power relations, I focus on the different modalities of power associated with the changing nature of these ‘financialised elites’. I argue that in contrast to earlier generations of financiers, the power of contemporary investment bankers emerges through their role choreographing transnational networks of financial actors associated with securitised and structured products rather than being purely read off their social or education background. I suggest that these networked forms of power relation are significant because, on the one hand, they have prevented investment bankers distancing themselves from the ongoing turbulence and uncertainty within the international financial system. Meanwhile, on the other hand, the ability of investment bankers to (re)produce such networks indicates that suggestions of the demise of ‘financialised elites’ in the wake of the global credit crunch may be too hasty as previous financial crises demonstrate the considerable ability of ‘financialised elites’ to seize moments of conjunctural opportunity to reinvent themselves through new financial products and organisations.

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