Family Office
Deutsche PWM staffs up with an eye to integration

Wanted: private bankers who can lead all-points charges on the
wealth front. Deutsche Bank is pulling in private-banking talent
to support its ambition of making its U.S. Private Wealth
Management (PWM) group "the leading fully integrated" private
bank.
To that end the Frankfurt, Germany-based megabank has made former
Bank of America private banker Mark Chiappara a managing
director with PWM, where he'll focus on
ultra-high-net-worth clients and "select institutions" in the
U.S. Based in New York, he'll report to Patrick Campion,
Deutsche's head of U.S. private banking.
More or less
Definitions of "ultra high net worth" vary. The World
Wealth Report, an annual study of the global high-net-worth
market by Capgemini and Merrill Lynch, uses the term to refer to
those with financial assets worth $30 million or more.
At Deutsche, however, the term "ultra high net worth" is used to
describe private clients with more than $5 million in investable
assets, says Deutsche PWM spokeswoman Mayura Hooper. In the
World Wealth Report lexicon clients with $5 million to $30
million in financial assets inhabit the "mid-tier wealth
band."
Conflicting definitions aside, Deutsche sees Chiappara as "one of
the leading private bankers in the country," according to Thomas
Bowers, head of PWM in the U.S. Chiappara's standing is due in
Bower's eyes to his "tremendous skill set and extensive banking
experience, particularly relating to capital markets and
structured lending."
Prior to his time at Bank of America's private bank, Chiappara
was an investment banker with Lehman Brothers. Before that
he was a derivatives specialist with Goldman Sachs. "We expect
Mark [to] have a significant impact on our business and enhance
our position as a successful integrated private bank," says
Bowers.
Another two
Chiappara will be joined at PWM by two other private bankers,
both former U.S. Trust staffers -- and both equipped to help
Deutsche achieve the product and service integration it's
striving to achieve, at least in Bowers' estimation.
Like Chiappara, Terri Sohrab, a 24-year veteran of
financial-service industry, joins Deutsche as a managing director
with a mandate to work with "ultra" high- net-worth individuals
and families.
Prior to U.S. Trust, Sohrab was a managing director with
Citigroup Private Bank. Sohrab also spent more than 10 years at
JPMorgan Chase Private Bank, latterly as a senior private
banker.
Like Chiappara, Sohrab will be based in New York. She
will also report to Campion.
Michael Mullin, a former relationship manager with U.S. Trust,
joins Deutsche as a v.p.-level private banker. Before working at
U.S. Trust, a subsidiary of Charles Schwab, Mullin worked at
Citigroup Private Bank.
Referring to the appointments of Sohrab and Mullion, Bowers says
that "Deutsche Bank is in the process of allocating significant
capital to the build out of a top-tier private banking
origination force" in aid of its efforts "to become the leading
fully integrated U.S. private bank."
By "integrated private bank" Deutsche means one that "brings an
array of products and services to our ultra-high-net-worth
clients through a single point of contact" says Hooper. "Those
[services] might include risk management, lending, trust and
estate planning and investments."
An outward sign of this integration is the fact that Deutsche's
PWM group includes its private banking operations as well as DB
Alex. Brown, the private-client consulting arm of Deutsche Bank
Securities, though they remain parts of distinct business
lines.
Genuine efforts
For now, pride of place as the leading integrated private bank is
an open slot, says Daniel Seivert, managing partner of 3C
Financial Partners, a Los Angeles-based investment banking and
consulting firm to wealth- and investment-management firms. "It's
not like investment banking where everybody covets the Goldman
Sachs platform and cachet," he says.
Traditionally "infighting about who owns the client have
impeded attempts at seamless wealth management by Wall Street
firms," according to Seivert. "But they've started [to put in
place] 'relationship hierarchies' to [determine] who holds the
pole position with regard to clients."
In other words, some of the big-name firms' efforts -- Merrill's
"Total Merrill" approach and Citigroup's moves to strengthen ties
between its top retail brokers and its private bankers, for
example -- put teeth into their talk about "holistic" and
seamless wealth-management offerings.
Advances in technology are also easing the way to integrating
wealth-related products and services, says Seivert. "Better
reporting is making it possible for more people at a firm to be
part of a 'global relationship' with the client -- one that's
actually reasonable from the client's perspective."
Whatever cultural or technological snags big-name
financial-service companies may be hitting on their way to
getting wealth-management products and services to well-off
clients as efficiently and congenially as possible, Seivert says
he's a bit surprised to see so many of them putting genuine
effort into the attempt. "A few years ago it seemed as
though the high-net-worth movement was just a banner
change," he says. "And though that may have been the case at
first, the label change has Wall Street firms trying to live
up to the meaning of wealth management and trying to deliver on
it." -FWR
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