The National - News

Mashreq boosts wealth management products as investment demand rises

- MAHMOUD KASSEM

Mashreq’s head of wealth management Ishrat Kiyani said the Dubai lender is beefing up its mutual fund range and portfolio solutions as clients increasing­ly invest excess funds through local banks and financial services firms.

“We are seeing a new developmen­t in the wealth management sector,” Mr Kiyani said. “A few years ago, a lot of our clients’ money was being moved overseas but now the tendency is to invest that money onshore.”

The bank doubled the number of mutual funds it offers clients to 80 last year and will soon increase them to 150, he said. It also introduced tailored portfolios for different risk appetites. The moves come after the bank’s assets under management had double-digit growth last year amid buoyant markets and an increase in subscripti­ons.

“Banks are waking up to the fact that this is a very profitable business for them and therefore more and more banks are vying foe a share of the pie and expanding their local presence,” said Mr Kiyani.

The executive said that because of increased competitio­n in UAE wealth management, the number of investment opportunit­ies was rising, as products become more sophistica­ted. These include bond funds that increase the yield they pay out by borrowing money to enhance the return of the investment, he said.

The UAE has been increasing its attractive­ness as an onshore hub for private banking to compete with other more developed arenas such as Switzerlan­d and Singapore. As a result, private banks have been making a beeline to Dubai to set up shop. More than 60 private banks and asset managers are based in the emirate.

Local banks have also been building up their wealth management divisions to reap more profits from non-interest income as they look to diversify their sources of revenues away from loans amid one of the longest stretches of low interest rates on record.

Over the past two-and-a-half years, Mashreq has doubled the number of its relationsh­ip managers to 70 and may add more this year, the executive said. That comes as the bank overall expects a reduction in headcount due to digitisati­on.

“Over the past decade, this region has earned its status as a global financial hub,” Mr Kiyani said. “Also the growth opportunit­ies for wealth management in the GCC are immense. Over the past 10 years, there has been a huge boom in oil prices that has generated wealth not only for individual­s but for government­s in terms of sovereign wealth funds.

And even though there are a number of geopolitic­al headwinds this year, there are also a number of catalysts for economic growth for in the region that include Saudi Arabia’s economic transforma­tion plan and infrastruc­ture projects undertaken Dubai’s Expo2020, Mr Kiyani added.

 ??  ?? Mashreq doubled the number of mutual funds it offers last year and introduced tailored portfolios Philip Cheung / The National
Mashreq doubled the number of mutual funds it offers last year and introduced tailored portfolios Philip Cheung / The National

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