The National - News

Why its chief executive is bullish about the region

▶ Chief executive says pickup in Middle East economies has not just been about higher oil prices

- MAHMOUD KASSEM

Julius Baer, the third-largest private Swiss bank with more than 388 billion Swiss francs ($410bn) of assets under management, said the Middle East outperform­ed for the wealth manager last year and is likely to continue to show promising growth this year as oil prices rebound from a three-year slump.

“The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia hold the most promise in the region this year as the two states boost efforts to diversify their economies,” Bernhard Hodler, the bank’s chief executive, told The National.

“In the past two years things have gotten better, and it has a little to do with higher oil prices, and I think the economy here in the UAE has become a bit more stable,” Mr Hodler said.

Assets under management in the region exceeded the target growth rate of between 4 per cent to 6 per cent in new money that the bank seeks to attract annually, he said.

Globally, Julius Baer was able to increase new money by 6.5 per cent last year, and expects to attract as much as 6 per cent more in 2018.

The Middle East region is forecast to grow in line with that this year, he said.

The region has one of the highest concentrat­ions of wealth per capita in the world.

Wealth in the Middle East grew at an average of 17.5 per cent a year from 2010 to 2014, doubling to $2.2 trillion from $1.1tn, according to the consultant­s Strategy&.

Almost half of the GCC’s wealth resides in Saudi Arabia.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia together controlled 74 per cent of the region’s wealth in 2013, compared with 71 per cent in 2009.

Though Mr Hodler is encouraged by the economic reforms in Saudi Arabia, he does not have plans to open an office there for the time being.

The bank has been beefing up its presence in the region, servicing its clients out of its Dubai office and other regional outlets.

In Dubai alone, the bank has 120 employees, most of whom are private bankers, he said.

Other private banks, including Credit Suisse, UBS and Indosuez Wealth Management, are also setting up or boosting their presence in the region.

Recent fines for a number of banks in Switzerlan­d have increased costs they may incur to ensure their compliance with rules and regulation­s.

That has made many of them keen to tap growth in high-yielding emerging markets.

Despite the uptick in wealth, private banks have stiff competitio­n.

The number of banks chasing affluent clients is rising.

There are more than 60 private banks operating in the Gulf, the majority of which are based in Dubai.

In other emerging markets, Mr Hodler sees most promise in the fast-growing economies of Asia and Latin America.

Asia already accounts for about a quarter of the bank’s assets under management, or about 100bn Swiss francs.

“In Asia, we call it our second home market, not just China but Asia as a whole as a market,” he said.

“It is an important market for us. We started at zero in 2006 and over the next 12 years we grew substantia­lly.”

Where the business itself is concerned, Mr Hodler has made it his priority to boost the percentage of assets that he manages that have advisory mandates to eke out more fees from value-added services rather than rely too much on revenues from custodial and transactio­nal one.

Currently, 50 per cent of the bank’s assets under management are under an advisory mandate.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia hold the most promise

... this year as the two states boost efforts to diversify their economies

BERNHARD HODLER Chief executive, Julius Baer

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 ?? Mahmoud Kassem / The National ?? Bernhard Hodler, chief executive of Julius Baer, says the UAE’s economy has become more stable
Mahmoud Kassem / The National Bernhard Hodler, chief executive of Julius Baer, says the UAE’s economy has become more stable

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