Business Standard
Friday, Jan 09, 2009
drived banner
drived banner
  Site Map | Feedback | Advanced Search | RSS | Blogs
ticker
Home > ICE World Live Markets | Smart Portfolios 
  Search: Google

i-bankers sink in marriage mart
Priyanka Joshi / Mumbai November 27, 2008, 0:58 IST

Considered, till recently, the “blue-chips” of the estimated $15 billion Indian matrimonial market, the marriage value of non-resident Indian (NRI) and India-based investment bankers is rapidly being eroded.

 
 
News Now
Paper
Specials
- Asian markets tumble; Indian markets closed on Thursday
- Satyam fraud to see CEOs huddle on corporate governance
- Raju family stake in Satyam falls to 2.34%
- Satyam may axe 10k employees next month: Headhunters
- Satyam embarks on damage control exercise
- RIL ceases gasoline sale to Iran
More  

Parents of prospective brides are now looking at other options. Take the case of Prashant Surve (name changed on request) who was to be married in January. A month ago, he was laid off from the North American investment banking and capital market division of Lehman Brothers, the i-bank that went into bankruptcy on September 15.

Suddenly, Surve discovered that his Hyderabad-based bride-to-be wasn’t keen to tie the knot while he was unemployed in New York. Nor could he find a bank willing to loan him money to fulfil his fiance’s demand for a “four-day theme wedding in Kerala”. As a result, Surve has decided to wait till he gets a job lucrative enough to finance a nuptial extravaganza.

"The recession has led to a 20 to 25 per cent slump in the demand for NRI grooms and NRI investment bankers,” confirmed Murugavel Janakiraman, CEO of Bharat Matrimony, a leading player in the $50 million online matrimony market.

"But Indian banking professionals continue to be in demand,” he added.

Meanwhile, the number of grooms looking for working women professionals as spouses has shot up almost 15 per cent on Shaadi.com, said Vibhas Mehta, business head, Shaadi.com. Job stability and economic security to tide over a slowdown, especially if it continues for another year or so, are becoming key requirements of parents in search of prospective grooms.

Taraa Dalal, a Mumbai-based professional matchmaker, said other professions were gaining at the cost of banking on the marriage mart. “We have seen a clear shift in choice of young brides and their families with almost 40 per cent of parents asking for doctors, engineers or bankers working in India,” she said.

In fact, there has been an estimated 35 to 40 per cent increase in the demand for India-based engineers, lawyers and doctors, IT and telecom professionals, if the top-most searched profiles on online matrimonial portals such as Shaadi and Bharat Matrimony are anything to go by.

There has also been a high demand for self-employed individuals.

Shravani (name changed), a young banking professional who is actively seeking a matrimonial alliance, admitted: “It’s already getting difficult to convince my mother that not all bankers are affected by this economic turmoil.”

  Read Business news in 
  Get Home Loan Counselling From HDFC - click here to know more.
  India's premier online business magazine
  Free E-book on The Future of Business Intelligence
Share this Story  
 
 
Discussion Board / User Comments
Display Name  
Post your commentMax limit:500 characters 
Limaye on 28-NOV-08
I guess parents have a right to choose the best for their kids and investmnet banking is in doldrums globally. I agree with author
Kk on 27-NOV-08
Despite the Mumbai drama this news bit was a reliever
Ibank on 27-NOV-08
I agree and I am one of the unlucky laid offs
Most Popular
Read
E-Mailed
Commented
   
- Regulators, govt tighten noose around Satyam
- In Raju's hometown, big panic for small investors
- Regulator may blacklist Price Waterhouse
- India slams Pak flip-flop over Kasab's citizenship
- PwC has a chequered past with taxmen
 
 
 More  

BS Poll
Cast Your Vote
 
   
 
Will the Satyam incident impact foreign inflows adversely?
  Yes  No
Submit

   Hot Searches  
 
Ramalinga Raju’s |  CitiBank  |  Satyam  |  Playstation 3  |  maytas  |  Reliance |  RBI |  Chidambaram |  Jet-Kingfisher |  Gold  |  India US Nuclear Deal |  Ratan Tata |  Bailout plan |  ICICI |  6th Pay Commission |  B-School |  Mukesh Ambani |   |  Chandrayaan |  DLF |  Ranbaxy |  Sensex | Tax calculator |  Anil Ambani |  Infosys  | Home Loan  | Bollywood | Subprime Crisis | Personal Finance |  inflation | oil prices  
 
 
  Member Area Write to the Editor RSS Archives Advanced Search
  Subscribe to BS print product BS e-paper Newsletter
  BS Products BS Hindi BS Motoring
FOR HOT PRODUCTS
BS Bazaar.com