Family Office
Citigroup wealth exec moves to Deutsche Bank

Mark Peters takes over where Gloria Nelund leaves off. Former
Citigroup executive Mark Peters has joined Deutsche Bank as head
of its U.S. private-wealth group. He replaces Gloria Nelund,
whose departure was presaged several months ago in an internal
memorandum from Pierre de Weck, head of Deutsche’s Private Wealth
Management (PWM) unit.
Nelund “successfully transformed” Deutsche’s U.S. private-wealth
group and leaves it “with a focused organization in place and a
clear growth strategy underway,” de Weck says in the May 2005
memo. Now he says that Peters – who was head of Citigroup’s U.S.
high-net-worth group – “has a strong background and proven track
record in brokerage and private banking, which will help us to
coordinate our businesses to offer a full array of tailored
solutions for our clients.”
Peters has worked with private clients for 24 years. Prior to
joining Citigroup he was a managing director of Credit Suisse
First Boston’s Private Client Services group. Before that he was
a private-client relationship manager with gs.com Goldman
Sachs.
The transformation of Deutsche’s U.S. private-wealth group that
de Weck mentions in his memo seems to have been a process of
getting rid of its investment-management entities in favor of a
non-proprietary investment-planning approach. In 2004 Deutsche
sold Scudder Private Investment Counsel, which it acquired in
2002 through its $2.5-billion purchase of Zurich Investments '
U.S. operations. The Boston office went to Eaton Vance last
summer; Legg Mason agreed to buy the remaining New York,
Philadelphia, Cincinnati and Chicago offices late last fall.
Back when Deutsche sold the Scudder PIC offices to Legg Mason,
Nelund said the deal was “consistent with PWM’s mission and
commitment to offer U.S. clients a comprehensive wealth advisory
approach,” which, she added, “differs from [Scudder] PIC's
investment-centered business.” –FWR
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