Company Profiles
BEST OF THE WEEK: INTERVIEW: Lombard International Cranks Up The Pace

A provider of wealth protection solutions recently gained regulatory clearance to open in Singapore, the latest move for a firm aiming to bring something rather different to the market.
Lombard
International is making waves and the expansion of this
wealth solutions provider shows no sign of letting up any time
soon. It is also open to the idea of making further acquisitions,
one of its senior executives told this publication.
At the start of this week the Philadelphia, US- and
Luxembourg-headquartered firm announced it had won regulatory
clearance to open an office in Singapore, arguably Asia’s prime
wealth management hub; the move adds to its office in Hong Kong.
Autumn has seen a flurry of high-ranking appointments: a head of
Latin America, a distribution and business development boss for
Switzerland and Northern Europe; it has opened an office in
Miami. There is now a “transatlantic solutions” team. In January,
Lombard International Assurance agreed to buy Zurich Eurolife
Luxembourg's Private Banking Solutions business; it confirmed
plans to expand into Asia with the appointment of Tammy Lu Tsui
as CEO for Asia. Phew.
In a moment between such announcements, Axel Hörger, chief
executive, Europe, of Lombard International, spoke to this news
service about the firm’s direction of travel. Hörger has held his
role since the start of February, when he joined to succeed John
Van Der Wielen. Prior to this, he was CEO at UBS
Deutschland. He has also held a senior role at Goldman Sachs
Asset Management.
Hörger is very keen for Lombard International to be a fully
global player in its field.
“We have built on the incredible expertise of wealth structuring
and solutions,” he said. “This is now a meaty business. Global
assets under administration stand at over $80 billion; Lombard
International has, globally, more than 500 staff, including more
than 60 technical experts specialising in 20-plus
jurisdictions.”
He added: “That expertise is in demand like never before in part
due to high net worth individuals becoming much more global in
where they work and partly due to the global uncertainties facing
individuals and families wondering about which jurisdictions to
make a home in and where to put their money.” (We spoke after the
23 June Brexit vote and before the result of the US Presidential
elections was known.)
The current climate is not particularly friendly to HNW
individuals. For example, the UK has tightened the regime yet
further for non-domiciled residents. Separately, dozens of
countries are implementing, as is a legal requirement across
jurisdictions, information swapping arrangements under the Common
Reporting Standard. With a greater stress on transparency across
international markets, there is a need for legally robust and
effective ways to protect wealth. And that is where life
insurance-based wealth solutions come in.
Lombard International, which is owned by the funds of Blackstone,
the US-based investment house, is among a handful of firms, such
as Swiss Life and Vie, that provide insurance policy structures
that individuals can use to hold assets and transfer them in a
way that assists in multi-generational succession planning,
portability and mitigates the burden of tax. An example of these
structures is private placement life insurance. This sector
has not generated a great deal of noise in recent years, but
awareness around it is growing.
About six years ago, Scorpio Partnership, the consultancy, noted
that the as-yet unfulfilled potential of wealth insurance
services was vast. In a report in 2010, Scorpio said demand for
high net worth offshore insurance-linked investment in emerging
markets was both large but also under-served by private banking
firms. It estimated that less than 5 per cent of all wealth
management portfolios in emerging markets included an insurance
component. If that share rose to 15 per cent in five years, this
would create a market of almost $1.2 trillion.
PPLI has been defined as products blending a life insurance
policy with a separately managed investment portfolio. As such,
they can be useful to high net worth individuals who want
more sophisticated structures; the insurance structure comes with
various tax advantages (these vary depending on jurisdictions);
income and capital gains will accrue free from tax and the death
benefit is not subject to inheritance or estate tax. PPLI
policies may in certain circumstances allow policyholders some
access to their capital within the fund while they are alive.
PPLI structures – sometimes referred to as “wrappers” in the US
market – are only some of the solutions that life insurance can
give rise to. Firms such as his, Hörger said, are well placed to
fill a gap left from those private banks which have cut back
on wealth planning staff to curb their costs. “Banks were just
not seeing them as standalone profit centres,” he said. A
continuing challenge in the wealth management sector is getting
people to see the value of paying for wealth structuring and
planning advice. “This for us is a strategic issue,” Hörger
continued.
To some extent, Lombard International as a firm provides
additional tools for bank advisors and independent wealth
advisors, and is not directly competing with such groups for
work. “We are not cannibalising any part of the B2B value chain,”
he said. “We enjoy a certain neutrality in the market. In fact,
we are not trying to steal market share but to expand that
market.”
Expansion
Hörger said Lombard International had been in an “aggressive”
phase of organic expansion, as well as working to integrate
acquisitions, such as the Zurich Eurolife business. “We
integrated that business extremely well,” he said. “We would be
very open to buying a bigger one [business]."
Another area of growth involves the firm looking to hire bankers
so that it is more attractive to banks and understands their
mentality better, he said.
The Asian expansion, as seen with new offices and senior hires,
is important. Asked about China, Hörger said Asia’s
second-largest economy was clearly a “big opportunity”, and
referred to “huge” renminbi outflows via Hong Kong and the need
to provide wealthy Chinese people with structures to hold and
protect wealth.