Business World

Deutsche ramps up Asia equity-derivative­s unit

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DEUTSCHE BANK AG is beefing up its Asia-Pacific equity-derivative­s unit, as it looks to capitalize on an expected rise in demand for quantitati­ve strategies from local investors.

David Bruchet, formerly of Societe Generale SA, will join the German bank in Hong Kong as an index equity- derivative­s trader at the end of January, said James Boyle, head of equities and cohead of global equity derivative­s, who joined from Citigroup Inc. in July. Bruchet becomes at least the sixth hire in the region under Boyle, who is putting in place his strategy to turn around Deutsche Bank’s fortunes in equity-derivative­s trading.

Chief Executive Officer John Cryan is seeking to boost stocktradi­ng operations while pulling back from other investment­banking businesses that are grappling with new capital rules and the cost of settling legal problems. The strategy has yet to pay off as the equities unit has slumped in 2016 and lags behind the Frankfurt-based firm’s rivals.

“Clients have money to put to work in Asia after being on the sidelines this year and Deutsche Bank has expertise in quantitati­ve strategies,” Hong Kong-based Boyle said in an interview.

Deutsche Bank’s equities trading revenue fell 25% in the first nine months of this year, worse than the 14% collective drop among nine of the biggest global investment banks, according to data from Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. It was as low as sixth in Coalition Developmen­t Ltd.’s 2015 rankings for Asia-Pacific equities, compared to first for fixed income.

The desks in Hong Kong and Singapore will trade around the world, Boyle said.

“We are ramping up here as investor demand in Asia is increasing­ly for global products,” he said. “They also want more diversific­ation and the US market is deep and liquid.”

ASSET GROWTH

Global assets in quantitati­ve strategy funds are on pace to grow to $1.2 trillion in 2019 from $265 billion in 2014, according to research from Citigroup. Two smart beta funds — which look at factors such as low volatility or dividend payouts rather that market capitaliza­tion — started by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in September now manage more than $1.1 billion.

In August, Credit Suisse Group AG hired Matthew Rothman as the head of quantitati­ve equity research to build a global team of quants, while Axa Investment Managers recruited three Goldman Sachs bankers earlier this year for a liquid absolute returns fund.

The trend bucks the broader move to cut trading staff amid underperfo­rmance in traditiona­l equity- derivative­s products. Global revenues were 27% lower at the end of the third quarter from a year earlier, as clients’ risk appetite waned and trading volumes remained subdued, Coalition Developmen­t’s latest data shows.

Standard Chartered Plc exited the business 12 months ago while Commerzban­k AG said last month it would spin off its structured equities business into a separate unit.

“Active management is challengin­g and risk-adjusted returns are superior from quantitati­ve strategies, which can take advantage of volatility and market dislocatio­ns while also being more profitable for us,” said Boyle.

Among Boyle’s other hires are Eric Jungers, head of synthetic equity trading for Asia Pacific, and derivative­s strategist Lars Naeckter, who both joined in September.

Deutsche Bank also hired Benjamin Biette from BNP Paribas SA as head of equity structurin­g for Asia in August, and ex-Natixis SA executive Mederic Gehl started an equity structurin­g role in Singapore in July.

Deutsche Bank also added Claire Arnaudo from BNP Paribas as head of multi-asset retail distributi­on, said Boyle, as the bank expands its retail structured products business.

 ??  ?? DEUTSCHE BANK’S logo adorns a wall at the company’s headquarte­rs in Frankfurt, Germany in this June 9, 2015 photo.
DEUTSCHE BANK’S logo adorns a wall at the company’s headquarte­rs in Frankfurt, Germany in this June 9, 2015 photo.

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