The National - News

BANKING MIRABAUD AIMS TO DOUBLE ASSET BASE IN MENA TO $6bn

The 200-year-old Swiss private bank set a seven-year target after opening Abu Dhabi office

- SARMAD KHAN

Mirabaud, the Swiss private bank which opened its second UAE office in Abu Dhabi Global Market last week, is looking to double its asset base in the Middle East and North Africa to $6 billion (Dh22bn).

Assets from the Mena region for one of the oldest Swiss wealth managers currently account for about 10 per cent of its $35bn global asset base, said Yves Mirabaud, the senior managing partner of Mirabaud.

“The AUMs [assets under management] we manage are close to $3bn in Dubai and the target is to double this amount in the next five to seven years, which will be a great achievemen­t,” Mr Mirabaud told The National.

The 200-year-old financial institutio­n is targeting global asset base growth of 4 to 8 per cent per year despite difficult market conditions, Mr Mirabaud added.

Wealth managers are increasing­ly focusing on the region, where wealth is growing above the global average despite tougher market conditions. The wealth of private high net worth individual­s – typically defined as those with $1 million or more of liquid assets to invest – in the Middle East and Africa region is expected to grow by 6 per cent annually until 2023, according to a study by Deutsche Bank and consultant­s Oliver Wyman in May this year.

Global high net-worth wealth grew to $70 trillion at a decelerate­d rate of 4 per cent in 2018 – far below levels of previous years – as challengin­g equity markets and fee compressio­n led to declining business valuations in the industry.

The strongest growth rates were observed in emerging markets at 7 to 8 per cent, while developed markets trailed at 2 to 3 per cent, according to the study.

Mr Mirabaud is particular­ly optimistic about the growth prospects of the UAE, which has influenced the bank’s decision to open a second base in Abu Dhabi’s ADGM, one of the fastest-growing financial hubs in the region.

For its Abu Dhabi venture, Mirabaud has partnered with SBK Holding, an investment vehicle controlled by Sheikh Sultan bin Khalifa, an adviser to the President of UAE and the eldest son of President Sheikh Khalifa.

Mirabaud owns 80 per cent of the ADGM-registered entity, while a unit of SBK holding will control the remaining stake, Mr Mirabaud said.

The new office is a “tremendous recognitio­n for our long associatio­n with the country,” he said. “We have built together strong relations [with Sheikh Sultan] within the past few years, and we decided that together we could launch this new venture to [better] serve private banking in the UAE market.”

Mirabaud, which has been present in the UAE since 2007, has launched its ADGM operations with a small team of six members, managed by Ronald Tamer, chief executive of Mirabaud in Abu Dhabi. It plans to increase the number of personnel as it grows the business incrementa­lly.

“We always grow with the business. We started in Dubai with three people and today we are close to 40 staff,” Mr Mirabaud said.

“It’s not going to be hundreds of clients [in Abu Dhabi] ... we want to focus on certain clients, family businesses, or high net-worth investors and entreprene­urs.”

The newly opened subsidiary in Abu Dhabi will offer domestic and internatio­nal wealth management advisory, business developmen­t, succession planning support and other investment services to its clientele in the capital and wider UAE. It will focus on local families, their networks and partners, according to a Mirabaud statement.

The wealth manager will continue to use its operations in the Dubai Internatio­nal Financial Centre as the hub for its broader Mena businesses.

“Here [in Dubai] it is much more internatio­nal [client business].

“Abu Dhabi will be much more local, family-business, [and some] institutio­ns maybe,” Mr Mirabaud said.

Mirabaud’s AUMs across the world are split, with two thirds coming from private clients and the remainder from institutio­ns, and the private bank is not forecastin­g a change to this mix in the near future.

“It is very difficult to predict. These are two very different businesses ... the speed of growth is very different for both lines,” Mr Mirabaud said.

“Historical­ly our main business has been private clients. We started 200 years ago, so asset and institutio­nal management is something we started much later,” he said.

“We want to grow both of them.”

It’s not going to be hundreds of clients in Abu Dhabi ... we want to focus on certain clients, family businesses or high net worth investors

 ?? EPA ?? Yves Mirabaud is optimistic about growth prospects in the region, particular­ly the UAE
EPA Yves Mirabaud is optimistic about growth prospects in the region, particular­ly the UAE

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