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From The Editor's Chair: Bank Strains, Acquisitions, AI And Offshore

We take a regular look back at important news stories and what the editorial team is working on.
It has been a month since I last updated you on our news agenda –
and what’s coming up next. It’s been an exceptionally busy and
rewarding time.
Three weeks ago, just before the Coronation of King Charles III
in the UK, this news service's team was in New York for
the annual Family Wealth Report Awards – the tenth time
we have held this event which is now a fixture in the North
American wealth management calendar. In the days leading up to
and after this, storm clouds darkened over First Republic Bank –
now owned by JP Morgan – adding to the sagas of
Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
We’ve covered these episodes to the extent where they resonate
with our wealth management audience; we try to avoid getting too
stuck in the “weeds” to convey where these deals might leave the
industry. A lot of people are considering changing jobs and
these are unsettling times in the US and Swiss banking sectors,
among others. Staying with the banking sector, the team continued
to track the progress of the UBS
takeover of Credit Suisse. Lawsuits are being filed by AT1
bondholders who are unhappy about the write-downs to these
bonds.
Elsewhere – and more positively – Canada’s CI Financial has sold
stakes in some of its US wealth businesses. US correspondent
Charles Paikert has covered the CI story and other corporate
activity extensively. (See Charles' analysis
here.)
Merger and acquisition activity in the North American, European
and Asian banking and wealth management markets remains an
important staple. For example, AlTi, the multi-family office
built out of the merger last year of Alvarium in London and
Tiedemann in the US, announced this week that it had
bought a Singapore-based business. The team has tracked how
Singapore and Hong Kong continue to compete for the family office
business – time will tell who has the right strategy. Right now,
it looks as though Singapore is in the driving seat.
Something Singapore has to watch is high property prices.
Westward, the Gulf region, with jurisdictions such as the
DIFC in Dubai and
ADGM in Abu Dhabi, has an eye on this business.
In April I had the pleasure of reporting on a fascinating
Monaco conference about how that tiny European jurisdiction
intends to keep thriving, and how it stacks up against other
jurisdictions (my job does take me to agreeable places, there's
no denying).
My colleague Amanda Cheesley has been tracking the investment
opinions of a range of investment and wealth management houses.
She's up in Edinburgh as I write these words for an investments
meeting. She has written articles about
Japan and
this story about what BNP Paribas Asset Management
thinks about artificial intelligence. Ah, yes – AI. This is a hot
topic. Public relations' figures are sending me lots of
commentary on the industry's thoughts about this
development.
There’s little doubt that AI is going to be a big deal for our
sector. So far, the likely trajectory is a bit hazy. We intend to
look at AI, and other technology, in
a forthcoming research report.
Interest rate rises in the
US, eurozone
and
UK continue to stir commentary, and we have tracked what
economists and wealth managers have to say about this. In some
ways, a world of higher interest rates isn’t bad news
for banks – they’re making a net interest margin again. Remember,
Swiss banks had to live with officially negative rates for
about seven years; Japan and Denmark, among others, had periods
of such negative rates. I recently reflected on lessons from a
brilliant book about why interest rates are so important.
There is also our old friend – tax. Our developing series of
guest articles includes this item
about sports and tax – not always an easy
relationship.
Coming down the line is a set of features about what sort of
skills wealth managers need now and are likely to be looking for
in the years ahead. I also have more content in the pipeline
about how privacy is affected by digital technology and the
evolving nature of the so-called “golden visa” market. I’ve
interviewed the Investment
Migration Council, a pan-industry group, about what is
happening with citizenship/residency-by-investment programs
around the world. I am also off to Singapore at the end of May
for our annual Asia awards program, and to meet up with industry
figures. Expect more content from that quarter.
As always, we value suggestions and feedback, so please email me
at tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com