People Moves
CEO Of JP Morgan's Private Wealth Management Arm In Asia Relocates To Singapore

Peter Flavel, the chief executive of private wealth
management at JP Morgan in Asia, has relocated from Hong Kong to
Singapore as the US lender seeks to bolster its
private banking division in the city-state.
"Hong Kong and Singapore are equally important and
we are growing both centres. And we would like to strengthen our
management
presence in Singapore,”
Flavel told this publication’s sister website,
WealthBriefingAsia.
A source close to the situation said: "The Singapore
franchise has grown dramatically. From effectively a start up
with just a
handful of private wealth staff in early 2011, the number of
client-facing high
net worth advisors has doubled in Singapore over the last 12
months." Flavel will still spend a large amount of time in Hong
Kong, said a spokesperson.
Flavel initially moved to Singapore
from Melbourne
in 2002 to join Standard Chartered. When he joined JP Morgan in
2011, he moved
to Hong Kong where the private bank's
headquarters were then based.
Andrew Cohen, CEO of JP Morgan Private Bank in Hong Kong, a
division which serves the ultra high net
worth segment of net worth above $30 million, will remain where
he is.
Changes in Asia
Meanwhile, the US
bank, which last week confirmed a $2 billion trading loss in its
London credit derivatives office, has been relocating
other key staff from Hong Kong to Singapore,
and from the US to Asia.
Adam Seward, executive director and head of internal human
resources for asset and wealth management in Asia,
was also recently relocated. Douglas Wurth, JP Morgan's
international private
banking CEO, relocated to Hong Kong from the US in 2010.
JP Morgan has traditionally focused on private clients with
a net worth of at least $30 million, as opposed to some of its
rivals like UBS
and Credit Suisse, which are happy to take on clients with
smaller pockets.
However, the bank more recently has been looking to tap clients
lower down the
scale, from $10 million and up, in a bid to tap entrepreneurial
wealth in the
fast-growth region.
JP Morgan private bank has assets under management of around
$750 billion globally, but does not disclose its Asia-Pacific
assets, nor does
it break down relationship manager numbers in regional divisions.