• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Private banks say: "now is the time to grow"

GENEVA
Mon Oct 13, 2008 1:13pm EDT

Stocks

   
Boris Collardi, Chief Operating Officer of Bank Julius Baer gestures during an interview at the Reuters Wealth Management Summit in Geneva, October 13, 2008. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

GENEVA (Reuters) - As the ongoing market crisis reshapes the global financial landscape, private banks with cash to spare are eyeing up takeover targets at rock-bottom prices.

Russia

Banks and dedicated offices catering for the rich mushroomed in the years before the credit crisis, as bankers sought to capture the immense wealth generated in fast-growing markets such as Asia, Russia and the Middle East.

But the sector now appears to be over-fragmented, offering those who think they can manage the storm opportunities to expand, executives said.

"I think now we're coming to the moment of truth in the market and I'm sure we'll see fascinating things," Boris Collardi, chief operating officer of the Swiss bank Julius Baer (BAER.VX) told the Reuters Wealth Management Summit.

The fast-moving banking consolidation wave that started off in the United States after the collapse of Lehman Brothers is thought to be approaching Europe.

"There will be consolidation opportunities," said Collardi, who said his bank sees itself as consolidator and has benefited from client net inflows in the current crisis. "I expect a lot more to happen over the next few weeks."

The merger wave has so far affected banks that have been hit by troubled investment banking operations. But takeover action specific to private banking is expected to follow shortly.

"There will be a redistribution of players, a concentration of players and a restructuring of players," said Pierre Baer, who heads Societe Generale's private bank in Singapore and South Asia. "We think we stand to benefit from that and we will be looking to make acquisitions. Now is the time for us to grow."

ING (ING.AS), one of world's largest savings banks thanks to its profitable on-line business, did not rule out that it could get involved.

"Private banking is a very, very fragmented business," said ING Deputy CEO Bernard Coucke. "We look at all opportunities.

Smaller players that have not seen large write-downs on toxic assets were also gearing up for an acquisition frenzy that would downsize an over-populated bank segment.

"One or two years down the road, the business of some will be much less attractive. In the asset management industry as a whole there are too many offerings. You could easily cut in half these offerings," said Christophe Bernard, Managing Director at unlisted Union Bancaire Privee, adding that the likelihood his bank would be a consolidator was "pretty high."

(For summit blog: summitnotebook.reuters.com/)

(Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)



More from Reuters

Photo

GMAC to get $3.5 billion more in government aid

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - GMAC Financial Services is expected to get about $3.5 billion of additional U.S. government aid to help the troubled lender absorb mortgage losses, a financial industry source familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

A sign informs passengers of a "High Risk of Terrorist Attack" at the departure security line at Reagan National Airport in Washington December 29, 2009.  REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque   (

Body scans are Obama's call

The Dutch are doing it. So what's taking the U.S. so long to make airport body scanners mandatory?  Full Article | Video 

People walk past a branch of Bank of America in New York's financial district April 28, 2009. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Move your money

Boycotting "too big to fail" banks is a great idea -- so long as investors remember that banks aren't the only ones responsible for the crisis.  Full Article