Credit Suisse may secure key banking license in Saudi Arabia

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Bloomberg

Credit Suisse Group AG is seeking to secure a key banking license in Saudi Arabia as part of plans to expand in the kingdom.
The Zurich-based bank, which has a securities and equities business in the country, is in talks with the central bank for an onshore license, Iqbal Khan, head of the bank’s international wealth-management business, said in an interview in Dubai. About a dozen international lenders, including Deutsche Bank AG and JPMorgan Chase & Co., currently hold the license, which allows banks to operate branches and take deposits in local currency.
“Our ambition is to have a full SAMA license and we are working towards that,” said Khan, responsible for Credit Suisse’s wealth management business in Latin America, Europe, the Middle East and Africa. “The Middle East is going through a trough in the short term but we’re bullish in the long term,” he said. SAMA is the abbreviated name of the country’s central bank, the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency.
The number of high-net-worth individuals in the Middle East rose 0.1 percent last year, while their combined wealth rose 0.9 percent to $2.3 trillion, according to the Capgemini and Merrill Lynch 2016 World Wealth Report. Credit Suisse expects the number of millionaires in the region will rise to 500,000 from about 330,000 in 2015 and hired 45 relationship managers across the Middle East last year, Khan said.
Thiam’s Strategy
Under a strategy designed by Chief Executive Officer Tidjane Thiam after he took the job in July 2015, the bank wants to focus on services for entrepreneurs and personal fortunes as it vies with competitors such as UBS Group AG and JPMorgan Chase to advise the ultra-wealthy. The Swiss bank is betting that it can attract affluent customers by offering individual clients loans as it pivots from investment banking to wealth management.
The number of super wealthy individuals is growing even as countries like Saudi Arabia impose measures to offset the financial strain of lower oil. The government is cutting subsidies for citizens on basics like electricity while trying to increase tax revenue and create jobs. In September, it canceled bonuses for state employees long taken for granted.
The bank manages about 70 billion Swiss francs ($72 billion) of private banking assets in the region, with assets growing “double digits” in the first half, Khan said.
International wealth management raised about 11 billion Swiss francs in net new assets during the first half, an annualized growth rate of about 7 to 8 percent, and extended more than 3 billion francs of new loans, Khan said.

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