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Singapore-Based Wealth Management Qualification Wins New Seal Of Approval

The Institute of Banking and Finance has given official blessing to a wealth management qualification offered by institutions in Singapore.
A wealth management qualification available in Singapore’s market
for the past 11 years has won the seal of approval from the
Institute of Banking and Finance, widening the value of these
credentials, and adding to efforts to boost the talent pool
in Asian wealth management.
The
Wealth Management Institute and Singapore
Management University said yesterday that the Master of
Science in Wealth Management now fits with IBF standards.
Because of the IBF’s recognition of the qualification, it now
also covers industry-defined competencies such as client
acquisition and servicing skills, investment and wealth planning
advisory, as well as risk controls and monitoring
processes.
The development comes at a time of continued movement in talent
management within private banking and related sectors. As this
publication has been told in the past, there remains a perceived
shortage of talent to meet needs of a rising number of high net
worth individuals. Credit Suisse, for example, said earlier this
year at a conference hosted by WealthBriefingAsia that
there are an estimated 7 million millionaires in the Asia region.
On the assumption that a banker can on average handle 35 clients,
that would translate into a need to have 200,000 private
bankers.
Explaining the original MWM programme, the Wealth Management
Institute and Singapore Management University developed the
qualification in 2004 to meet the perceived needs of a rapidly
expanding wealth management sector in the jurisdiction. The
organisations say the qualification programme now ranks as number
one in Asia, and third in the world, behind London Business
School and University of Cambridge’s Judge Business School, in
the Financial Times Masters in Finance post-experience ranking
2015.
The qualification will also incorporate the Client Advisor
Competency Standards (CACS) assessment, which is required for
entry into the private banking industry. MWM is on the approved
list of programmes supported and eligible for the MAS Financial
Scholarship Programme. Singaporeans who pursue an MWM may also
apply for the FSP. Candidates will undergo a selection process
and those who are awarded the FSP scholarship will receive 70 per
cent funding on the full MWM fees of S$60,000 ($42,606).
Participants of MWM may be funded under the Financial Sector
Development Fund that is run by the Monetary Authority of
Singapore. Singaporeans and permanent residents of Singapore will
be eligible for subsidy.
The MWM programme is offered by WMI and SMU in collaboration with
the Swiss Finance Institute in Switzerland and the Yale School of
Management in the US. It was launched in 2004 as Asia’s first and
only full-time master’s degree programme in wealth
management.
For a list of postgraduate wealth management training programmes
and business school courses aimed at the sector, click
here.