Strategy
EDITORIAL COMMENT: Asia's Rising Economic Tide Hasn't Lifted All Wealth Managers' Boats

A report from ANZ says Australian firms can make big money expanding into Asia. Ironically, ANZ is the latest in a list of lenders to shutter wealth management operations in the region. Why do wealth managers find it so hard to capitalise on growth in Asia?
Of the seemingly contradictory features involved in writing about
private banking, one of the most notable has been recording how
Asia is said to be becoming the economic powerhouse of the world,
while also noting that a string of foreign banks are pulling
out.
In a period of about two years, Societe Generale, Barclays and,
most recently, ANZ have sold private banking operations to
local banks (SocGen to DBS, Barclays to OCBC and ANZ to DBS).
Banque Internationale à Luxembourg has shuttered its Singapore
operation. ABN AMRO’s private bank in Asia is up for sale. In
such cases, the banks often say that for all their
commitment to doing business with Asia in some way,
maybe via joint ventures or partnerships, private banking has
been insufficiently profitable to justify the expense and toil of
building a business directly. (And that, of course, does not
include the separate, unrelated cases of
Switzerland-headquartered banks BSI and Falcon Private Bank being
kicked out of Singapore for regulatory lapses. Citi Private Bank
was similarly punished by Japan in 2004.)
In other words, Asia has been anything other than a happy
experience for a fair number of Western banks. True, some firms,
such as Zurich-listed Julius Baer, which calls the region its
second home market, appear fully committed and
are flourishing in Asia, as far as data shows. UBS and
Credit Suisse are big players making Asia a key part of their
strategy, while firms as varied as Citigroup, Standard Chartered
(arguably an Asian bank in many respects, despite its UK listing)
and BNP Paribas have significant footprints. HSBC, a bank with
deep roots in Asia (a fact that sometimes surprises people who do
not ask what its acronym stands for), is clearly strong in the
region. Union Bancaire Privée, the Geneva-headquartered
private bank, actually raised its Asia business further by the
Coutts International acquisition of more than a year
ago.
But it is striking, nonetheless, that quite so
many Western-based firms have pulled down the shutters when
one reads about Asia’s economic ascent. A rising tide has not
lifted all boats. Or maybe it depends on what sort of vessel is
in the harbour.
High costs of hiring quality staff and a preference among
the local HNW population for the largest brands or local
lenders have played a part in forcing some of the exodus and
restructuring. Maybe there has also been a recognition that
building out a local presence in Asia, where the ways of doing
business can be very different, takes considerable time. And
where the bank in question might have impatient shareholders
looking for improvements in return on equity, time is a luxury
they do not have.
Such thoughts come to mind when, ironically enough, ANZ yesterday
released a report saying “Australian businesses could gain $138
billion in annual revenue by expanding into Asia”. The ANZ
Opportunity Asia report, based on a survey of 1,000
Australian businesses and their sentiments
on international growth, found those already set up in Asia
achieve on average a 16 per cent higher turnover than
domestically-focused operations, with 57 per cent saying their
operations in Asia make sustainable growth “far more
achievable”.
Of course, the business sectors covered in the ANZ report go far
wider than financial services. But at the very least it does
seem rather strange that a bank that has made a point
of focusing more on its domestic strengths and cut its
Asian retail/wealth management offering should have issued such a
study at this time in its own business story.
ANZ, in its defence, may argue that there is no contradiction – a
general class of businesses is going to benefit from an
expansive, positive approach to Asia, but some sectors are much
more likely to see this strategy bear fruit than others. It
certainly does seem that for wealth management in general, Asia
has been anything other than easy for foreign players to
penetrate, and that to win takes a lot of resource and patience.
For those firms that can get their strategy right, the rewards
may yet be rich.