People Moves
Falcon's Head Of Private Banking Steps Down From Helm

Falcon confirmed Pfister's departure to this publication.
Swiss private banking luminary Erich Pfister, who was named head
of Falcon
Group's private banking arm last year, has left the
scandal-hit firm, this publication can confirm.
“We can confirm that Erich Pfister decided to leave Falcon to
pursue a new opportunity outside of Falcon,” a spokesperson for
the bank said in an emailed statement.
The firm provided no further details about his
departure.
Last week, Falcon Private Bank, which was last year kicked out of
Singapore amid an alleged money laundering scandal, announced two
of its directors were set to leave the firm.
The Abu Dhabi-owned firm said that Murtadha M Al Hashmi and H E
Khaled Balama AlTameemi had “decided to leave our board of
directors”.
The bank added: “We would like to thank both gentlemen for their
valuable contributions during their tenure on our board.”
The announcement came after an extraordinary meeting of
shareholders of the bank, it said. At that EGM, Cyril Latroche
was elected as new board member.
The lender has seen a number of senior changes since authorities
in Singapore ordered the bank, along with fellow Swiss private
bank BSI (now owned by EFG International), to leave the Asia
city-state after failings were discovered around money laundering
controls. Singapore has punished a number of firms for
transactions linked to Malaysia’s state-run 1MDB fund; the fund
is accused of being a conduit for corrupt financial flows by
politicians and other individuals. Falcon Private Bank last
September recruited industry luminary Walter Berchtold as its new
chief executive, stepping in to replace retiring CEO Eduardo
Leemann.
Latroche is part of the investment team at Aabar Investments PJS,
which is the name of the entity owning Falcon Private Bank; he
joined Aabar in 2016, where he focuses on the financial services
sector. Prior to joining Aabar, Latroche was responsible for the
strategic development and the asset management activities of
Mubadala GE Capital, an Abu Dhabi-based 50/50 joint venture
between Mubadala Development Company and GE Capital.
Singaporean authorities earlier this year charged and jailed a
former branch manager of Falcon Private Bank in connection with
1MDB. Jens Sturzenegger was jailed for 28 weeks over 16 charges
including failing to report that $1.27 billion of inflows into
two bank accounts were suspicious. He pleaded guilty.
Falcon Private Bank, a Swiss firm, has offices in London, Zurich,
Abu Dhabi and Dubai.