Strategy
Deutsche Bank Sets Sights High On EAM Sector
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Deutsche Bank’s EAM focus is a strategic plank in the Emerging Markets business, a senior figure says.
Deutsche Bank
is aiming high when it comes to external asset managers – going
after EAM partners who are in the top 10 per cent of this segment
of the wealth management market, a senior executive says.
As explained here, the market for EAMs in jurisdictions such
as Singapore has expanded strongly with a large and established
market in Switzerland. Not without challenges – Swiss regulators,
for example, in 2023 imposed
new obligations on the Alpine state’s market – it is seen as
a channel for revenue generation by several major banks. In
Singapore, regulators have
tightened controls to prevent money laundering.
The Frankfurt-listed bank went live with a dedicated EAM team in
Hong Kong, Singapore and Dubai in January 2025. In June it went
live with a team in Geneva and Zurich.
“We have clear growth ambitions and there is fantastic potential
in the EAM segment we are focused on. We’ve set up our teams, and
now is the time to deepen existing relationships and selectively
build new ones,” Hugo van Kattendijke (main picture), Deutsche’s
private banks head of external asset managers, emerging markets,
told WealthBriefingAsia in a recent call.
Deutsche is proactively originating EAM partners who are top
decile in their respective focus markets, he said. “We have laid
the ground with our new EAM structure and now are ready to deepen
our existing EAM relationships, and selectively onboard new EAM
relationships,” he said.
As reported
previously, van Kattendijke said the bank sees EAMs as
integral to its institutional offering for the UHNW segment,
enabling the bank to reach beyond the clientele that it serves
directly. Deutsche Bank’s EAM focus is a strategic plank in
the emerging markets business run by Marco Pagliara, who is head
of the private bank’s emerging markets head.
“We have clear growth ambitions and there is fantastic potential
in the EAM segment we are focused on. We’ve set-up our teams, and
now is the time to deepen existing relationships and selectively
build new ones,” van Kattendijke said.
Based in Singapore and with more than two decades’ experience in
financial services, van Kattendijke joined Deutsche Bank 10
months ago from UBS/Credit Suisse, where he had been head of EAMs
for APAC. Before joining Credit Suisse in 2022, he worked for
more than 10 years at UBS; from 2015 to 2018 he was head of asset
servicing APAC and from 2018 to 2022 he was head of financial
intermediaries APAC. He joined UBS in 2011 from Vontobel banking
group’s Harcourt Investment Consulting arm.
Crucial role
The role that banks provide as custodians to Asia’s external
asset managers is crucial. The custody role covers everything
from compliance through reporting, asset servicing – such as
collecting dividends and interest payments – to settling and
clearing securities. Custodians are in the business of keeping
assets safe. Bank of Singapore, Lombard Odier, Standard
Chartered, RBC Wealth Management and Northern Trust are among
those involved in the sector. Other names in the frame include
groups such as Saxo Bank and Interactive Brokers.
Van Kattendijke said there is considerable internal collaboration
between the EAM and direct markets teams at the bank, and
Deutsche’s main stakeholders. “The collaboration has been
outstanding,” he said.
Deutsche Bank can play to its strengths, van Kattendijke said.
“You need to take stock of what the bank is very good at,” he
said, referring to sophisticated lending capabilities and
appetite, and depth and breadth of foreign exchange and capital
markets specialists. This helps EAMs and ultra-HNW clients to use
the
bank’s cross-jurisdictional footprint, he said.
EAMs are often founded by those who want to provide a more
independent wealth offering, perceiving clients’ greater
appetite, perhaps unhappy at the “product push” of large banks in
the past. There is also a generational shift – first-generation
wealth holders might have been keener on a large, familiar brand,
while their successors might prefer a different
approach.
“The emergence of the EAM industry can be linked as both enabler
and beneficiary with the Next Gen wealth transfer mega theme,”
van Kattendijke said. “For example, generally first-gen family
wealth creators are less familiar with the wealth management
industry and seek out international brand names as service
providers across the value chain. The next generations still
value the assurance of blue-chip names, but they are increasingly
open to engaging with multiple independent sources of expertise
and advice, and hence the secular upward trend for EAMs.”
The partnership between banks and EAMs brings powerful benefits
to clients, a blue chip bank can serve as the reassuring “anchor
point” to complement independent advisory,” he said.
In creating the EAM business, van Kattendijke said Deutsche has
also created a distinct career proposition within the private
bank.
“We are creating a career path for people within the bank who
want to specialise in this growing market segment. So far, our
team members are attracted to this segment of institutional
wealth management because they can build specialist knowledge and
focus on long-term relationships with sophisticated clients,
delivering the full spectrum of wealth management services and
capabilities,” he added.
(See other articles about EAMs and the sector here and here.)