Company Profiles
Merged Wealth House Eyes Opportunities In HNW Expat Market

We talk to a recently merged business, with footprints in Asia and the US, about the kind of issues arising from wealthy expats looking for more options in an uncertain world.
Serving the needs of expats continues to be a challenging but
lucrative sector for international wealth and private client
firms. With geopolitical troubles often making front-page news,
there’s also plenty of incentive for HNW individuals to think
hard about where they want to live, such as in the US.
The business of helping expats to negotiate the reefs and shoals
of different jurisdictions’ rules is a well-trodden one for
The
Capital Company, a business with a strong Asian footprint
that recently merged with US firms LeoGroup and BFT Financial to
form Leo Wealth.
The enlarged group unites players from New York, Hong Kong and
Dallas Fort Worth.
Chinese people – including those in Hong Kong – are looking for
“a back-up plan,” Jessica Cutrera, founding partner of The
Capital Company and now president of Leo Wealth, told this news
service.
“The US is still one of the top destinations. There is still a
lot of interest in US real estate and in US trust structures,”
she said.
That there is an outflow from certain countries cannot be denied.
In 2019, 4,200 Hong Kong HNWIs migrated from the country leading
to a loss of 3 per cent of its HNW population (source: India
Times, AfrAsia Bank, June 17, 2021). In 2019 more than
16,000 Chinese and 7,000 Indian HNW people left their respective
countries, accounting for a two per cent loss of their HNW
population. However, relative outflow from Russia and Turkey was
higher at six and eight per cent, respectively. (Data for 2020
appears harder to pin down and of course physical movement has
been severely constrained anyway by the pandemic since the start
of 2020).
And HNW migrants realize that they need to have their tax and
other financial affairs in order, considering the heightened
desire by governments to levy taxes and repair COVID-ravaged
public coffers. Some people eyeing the US as a new home might not
fully appreciate how the Internal Revenue Service taxes US
citizens/Green Card holders on a worldwide basis. Once you’re in
the embrace of Uncle Sam, it’s a struggle to break free if you
change your mind.
There is, Cutrera said, more awareness around the world about
“tax responsibility.” “With information sharing and big data,
people are a lot more concerned about tax compliance matters. The
framework of all of this is often overwhelming to people,” she
said. “There are more people thinking about planning.”
In Asia, there are firms that work with US expats, for example
some of the larger banks, wealth managers, and some specialist
firms. “There are firms in Switzerland that do this work in the
private wealth space. In Asia, most [firms looking after US
expats] tend to be private equity and hedge fund firms. It is
still a challenge in Asia,” she said.
Some Asian HNW clients see opportunities to educate their
children in the US and experience Western culture. “They want
optionality,” Cutrera said.
It is not just Hong Kongers, for example, who are thinking about
reassessing where they live.
“We have also contacted families in Thailand and Malaysia and
they are interested in having more options outside their home
countries…it is about having more choices,” she said.
One issue is that HNW individuals and their families have complex
financial affairs that need to be straightened out. This speaks
to a kind of “project management” role that many wealth managers,
if they are doing their jobs properly, need to perform to help
clients.
“We have run into a number of people where they need some
clean-up work after they received some bad advice…they got into
some complex situations,” Cutrera said.
Asian growth
The rise of Asia as a financial powerhouse means that HNW individuals from the region who want these jurisdictional choices form a lucrative market. After the three firms merged into Leo Wealth, they had $4.3 billion of assets to manage. And this kind of business has the footprint necessary to serve those with Asian and US connections: Leo Wealth is licensed by the Securities and Exchange Commission and by the Securities and Futures Commission in Hong Kong.
Another trend that Leo Wealth’s executives see is the growing importance of onshore wealth management in Asian jurisdictions where in the past money was handled offshore.
“We are seeing more of an onshore wealth management market in
Thailand and Indonesia. We are seeing more people creating family
offices in Singapore and some also in Hong Kong,” Harmen
Overdijk, chief investment officer at Leo Wealth, told this
publication in the same interview.
The firm also has the capabilities for helping people who want to
build family offices or who already run them. Leo Wealth likes
this kind of client, Overdijk said.
“We would rather deal with licensed counterparties…they take a
more professional approach in using services such as ours. A lot
of these families are to be found in private equity and real
estate deals…they use family offices for liquid portfolios and
look to us for advice,” he said.
Cutrera weighed in on this theme.
“For family offices, we are their go-to when they have
questions,” she said. Leo Wealth is looking to partner with FOs
such as those from China.
A part of the phenomenon of wealthy people seeking options is
that of "golden visas", aka citizenship/residency-by-investment
programs operated in a number of countries, including the US,
with its EB-5 Green Card system. There are dozens of these
programs around the world, in jurisdictions such as Portugal,
Spain, Malta, the UK, a number of Caribbean Islands and
Singapore. These golden visas have been criticized at times for
being an alleged conduit for dirty money. Canada, which had such
a program, mothballed it about six years ago amidst complaints it
was causing severely inflated real estate prices in cities such
as Vancouver.