The Scotsman

Weatherbys Private Bank doubles up in Scotland as personal touch pays off

● ‘Serious intentions’ to further develop and grow business north of the Border

- By SCOTT REID sreid@scotsman.com By PERRY GOURLEY

Weatherbys Private Bank is doubling up on its presence in Edinburgh after a surge in business north of the Border.

The seventh-generation firm opened an office in the capital in 2015 to support its Scottish customers and has since seen business numbers double across key measures including deposits, lending, investment­s and client numbers.

The bank – part of the Weatherbys brand, which is bestknown for its activities in horseracin­g – has now taken a lease on an office in the capital’s Rutland Square that provides it with double the space of its previous base on the same street.

Duncan Gourlay, associate director and head of Weatherbys Private Bank in Scotland, said the lender now has six full-time members of staff in Edinburgh with two more to be recruited shortly.

He said: “We have serious intentions to further develop and grow our business in Scotland. Weatherbys offering, which remains full-service private banking, lending and wealth management, and our independen­townership­isnow unique in the marketplac­e.

“Free from corporate constraint­s this approach to banking – treating clients as individual­s, being responsive, reliable, flexible, forward looking and keeping things simple and straightfo­rward – is paying dividends.”

The bank, which is headquarte­red in Wellingbor­ough, Northampto­nshire, recently appointed Jacqui Low to its advisory board as part of its Scottish growth plans.

Low, executive chairman of Edinburgh-based communicat­ions company Indigo, is the chair of Partick Thistle football club. She was Scotland’s first female special adviser and has held a number of board appointmen­ts, including as vice-chairman of health informatio­n service NHS 24 and serving two terms on the council of CBI Scotland. The bank has built up a diverse client base in Scotland, encompassi­ng everything from young entreprene­urs to traditiona­l land-owning families.

This year Weatherbys reported pre-tax profits of £5.7 million, which compared with £6.8m a year earlier though that figure included a gain of £1.1m from the disposal of the bank’s shares in Visa Europe.

The total assets of the group increased by 20 per cent to £759m, marking a continuati­on of the sustained growth which has seen assets double since 2013.

Customer lending balances grew by 18 per cent to £388m with a loan-to-deposit ratio of 55 per cent. Lending has grown by 160 per cent in the last five years. A Scottish intellectu­al property firm has unveiled plans to double its workforce on the back of a move to new offices.

Cameron Intellectu­al Property, which recently relocatedt­onewheadqu­arters in Glasgow city centre, is looking to increase staff numbers to ten with additional roles including a patent attorney, business developmen­t executive and a trainee attorney.

Founded in 2011 by chartered patent attorney Stewart Cameron – who had a background in aeronautic­al engineerin­g before working in a large multinatio­nal intellectu­al property firm for a decade – the business provides services around protection of patents, designs, trade marks and copyright.

Clients include Clansman Dynamics, Agripa and Associated Seafoods.

Cameron said the firm, which also has a base in Aberdeen, was seeing growing demand in the UK and internatio­nal markets.

“By expanding our team, we will be better positioned to meet this demand and also engage with new opportunit­ies.”

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