Quote:
|
Originally Posted by freeier we are talking abotu financial services right..
i.e. hedging of loans and interest rates and this and that.
i don't think india has a strong enough investment bank to be selling to the world their services yet. |
India is trying to branch out into the financial arena with some non-Indian companies outsourcing their basic operations (credit checking etc...) to India, however this tends to be more commercial banks than investment banks (such as barclays, hsbc etc...). For India to gain this business and persuade a multinational to move its operations there it has to speak the language of the country moving it's operations there, not insist that they learn Hindi.
Regarding Indian companies themselves, well they aren't really strong in financial services so there aren't going to be lots of Indian banks in HK to work in which are populated solely by Indian people trading on the Indian market and which require you to speak Hindi. I'm sure there's one or two, but it's not the norm. Any banks that do trade in emerging markers (India being one of them) will likely be American/British/Chinese/Japanese etc... so English or a far-eastern language will be the ones spoken in the office.
The only reason you would need to speak Hindi would be if you moved to work in India and even then it's likely you wouldn't unless you were working for a local Indian employer or working in a frontline role (like in a branch meeting normal customers, which I'm guessing the OP isn't looking to do). India itself is not getting a lot of investment in it's own financial industry, it is supporting other countries' finance industries via outsourcing hence it has to adopt the language of the country it is outsourcing to to get the business.
As the OP asked about finance jobs in HK (and I'm guessing he/she means stuff like accounting or product control, not selling a mortgage to a person in a local branch) and not India then he has no need whatsoever to be learning Hindi, Cantonese or Mandarin would make much more sense.