Family Office
Dresdner sells Latin American advisory unit

The German bank wants to concentrate on home-market private
clients. Dresdner Bank plans to sell its Dresdner Lateinamerika
Financial Advisors (DLFA) unit to EFG Capital International, a
Miami-based subsidiary of Swiss EFG Bank. The deal comes roughly
six months after Dresdner sold its Latin American private banking
business to UBS, another Swiss Bank, in a bid to concentrate its
efforts on European wealth markets.
Neither side would disclose the terms of the transaction.
EFG Bank says the acquisition will strengthen its franchise in
Latin America, which it considers important to its growth. “We
will be able to expand our product offerings and further enhance
our client services,” says EFG Capital International CEO Victor
Echevarria . The bank adds that it will absorb DLFA, which has a
staff of 25, directly into the acquiring unit.
Its own backyard
Late last fall, Dresdner, part of the Frankfurt-based Allianz
Group, decided to restructure Dresdner Bank Lateinamerika.
Dresdner CEO Herbert Walter bills that as part of the bank’s
efforts “to conquer the future” – specifically by positioning
itself as “the leading European integrated financial service
provider.” It re-absorbed the corporate and investment banking
parts of its Latin American subsidiary into its German operations
and – as mentioned – sold the private bank to UBS.
From a wealth management perspective, these developments suggest
that Dresdner – reeling from a few disastrous years in the early
part of this decade – is keener on trying to gather private
assets on or near its home turf than on chasing them halfway
across the globe. Over the past four or five years European
governments have passed legislation to encourage the repatriation
of assets from foreign banking havens – read Switzerland.
To make up for dwindling flows of foreign private-client assets,
Swiss banks have gone on a cross-border shopping spree with UBS
leading the way. In 2003 it bought Lloyds Bank in France, Merrill
Lynch's German private banking operations, and U.K. firms Laing &
Cruickshank and Scott Goodman Harris. In 2004 it bought German
multi-family office Sauerborn Trust in addition to Dresdner’s
Latin American private bank. Besides those acquisitions, it has
opened new private-client offices in France, Germany, Italy,
Spain and the U.K.
Nine-year-old EFG Capital International is a U.S.-registered
broker-dealer. Its parent EFG Bank is part of the Geneva-based
EFG Group, one of the five biggest financial service companies in
Switzerland.
DLFA was formed in 2002, the result of a merger with Dresdner
Bank Lateinamerika’s Miami-based private banking business with
Vestrust Securities. It has about $1 billion in assets under
management. –FWR
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