Asia private banks’ assets take a dive

The entrance of the Swiss banking giant UBS main headquarters is seen on September 15, 2011 in the center of Zurich. UBS revealed that a rogue trader had lost an estimated $2.0 billion (1.46 billion euros) in unauthorised trades, and that it may plunge into the red as a result. Shares in the bank nosedived on the announcement which was issued two minutes before trading began, plummeting 7.04 percent to 10.16 francs, before recovering slightly to a loss of about 5 percent.   AFP PHOTO / FABRICE COFFRINI (Photo credit should read FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images)

Bloomberg

Asia’s top private banks posted their first drop in assets under management and number of relationship managers in at least three years as the region’s economic growth slowed and mounting regulatory pressure forced them to reject some clients.
Total assets at the 20 biggest banks in Asia fell 4.2 percent to $1.47 trillion last year, as the number of relationship managers slipped 1.2 percent to 5,191, according to an Asian Private Banker report released on Wednesday.
The declines were the first since the Hong Kong-based publisher began compiling the data in 2012. It cited stringent US tax compliance law, which made some banks turn away clients with links to that country.
UBS Group AG, Citigroup Inc. and Credit Suisse Group AG stayed atop the ranking in 2015 based on assets under management.
Banks see private banking as a revenue booster because the number of rich people in Asia is rising as economic growth outpaces that of the rest of the world.
“The good news is that if there is one bright spot in the wealth management world, it is Asia,” the publisher said in the report.
UBS plans to double China staff in five years to 1,200 partly by expanding its wealth business in Asia’s largest economy, undaunted by the slowdown and stock market turmoil, Chief Executive Officer Sergio Ermotti said in January.
Citigroup’s assets under management fell almost 18 percent to $210 billion in 2015 when the New York-based lender sold its Japan consumer operations.
The number of the bank’s relationship managers, who recruit clients and sell services, dropped about 28 percent to 325 as a result. At Zurich-based Credit Suisse, assets declined 2.2 percent to $150.6 billion from 2014, while headcount jumped 14 percent, according to the report. UBS’s assets rose 0.7 percent to $274 billion, while its sales staff fell 7.9 percent to 1,092.
Deutsche Bank AG, which restructured some businesses including wealth, dropped to eighth place from fifth in the 2015 ranking, as assets under management declined to $66 billion from $105 billion, Asian Private Banker said.
Julius Baer ranked fourth, DBS Group Holdings Ltd. placed fifth and Morgan Stanley held the sixth spot, with each climbing one rung in the rankings.

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