Strategy
INTERVIEW: Citi Private Bank Targets Larger - But Fewer - Ultra-Wealthy Clients

Citi Private Bank has its eyes set firmly on targeting what it regards as an ultra high net worth market “sweet spot” - individuals with a liquid net worth of at least $25 million, the firm recently told Family Wealth Report.
Citi Private Bank has
its eyes set firmly on targeting what it regards as an ultra high
net worth
market “sweet spot” - individuals with a liquid net worth of at
least $25
million, Peter Charrington, chief executive for North America,
recently told Family Wealth Report.
Wealth management
firms homing in on the $5- $25 million high net worth space tend
to have “big
armies on the field” and are therefore in a very profitable
place. But this
volume-based approach often relies on an “off-the-shelf” type of
service and
doesn’t marry well with customization – a big component of Citi’s
UHNW
offering, Charrington said at the bank’s New York office earlier
this month.
There remains debate
in the wealth management industry as to what is the “sweet spot”
in terms of
the most profitable client segment to cultivate, particularly as
it is
sometimes claimed that UHNW clients can be an expensive customer
base to serve.
Charrington has worked
at Citi since 1994 and became head of the North America private
bank in June
2009, when Citi was selling the brokerage side of its business,
Smith Barney,
to Morgan Stanley.
He explained that the
firm has moved away from being a distribution business having
some 17,000
brokers, to one with around 175 bankers focused on larger - but
fewer - UHNW
clients and family offices.
“I think Citi has come
a long way compared to a few years ago when its strategy was to
try and be all
things to all mankind. Our approach is now centered on being very
specific about
the type of clients we can serve, and knowing who we can’t – we
don’t look
after people with $5 million,” Charrington said.
“Everyone has a place
to play and we know we compete with all of them; it depends on
what we’re doing
and who we’re serving. Say you’re one of our larger competitors,
you’ve got a
very big army on the field, so you’re going to need to go for
volume. A lot of
the industry is going after people with, say, between $10 million
and $25
million. That’s a very profitable place to be, if, by and large,
your services
are effectively ‘off the shelf.’ But you’re not going to have a
lot of
customized offerings because customization kills that business.”
The average Citi
Private Bank banker would have around 30-40 clients, while the
average banker
in a mass affluent business would probably look after 150-200, he
noted.
“It’s a very different
business model. I like to think of our business as a more
boutique business
with the benefits of a big global bank behind us we’re able to
work with many of
the world’s billionaires, whose pricing power is considerable,
but whose needs are
very different from those of the mass affluent.”
Indeed, Citi has been
ramping up its UHNW team across the US in recent months.
This month alone it
announced recruits at its Dallas, TX, office - Paul Cooke, Jake
Trousdale and
Sara Doutt - and Northern California office - William Epperson
Giles and Steve
Beverage. In August it also added Ryan McCleary and Blair Ege as
directors and
UHNW private bankers in Houston, TX, and Washington, DC,
respectively.
Meanwhile, results on
the private banking side have also been solid; net revenues at
Citi Private
Bank rose 9 per cent year on year from $591 million in the second
quarter of
2012 to $645 million in Q2 2013. Revenues were up 3 per cent from
this year’s
first quarter, driven by North America and EMEA.
Strategy
Charrington cited some
key themes fueling Citi’s strategy for expanding the private
banking business in North America going forward.
“We are a big lending
business…most of our clients here are entrepreneurs – they are
people who are
in the first or maybe second generation of wealth and are in the
wealth
creation phase of their lives.”
The firm has logged
growth in some “exciting areas” of the US, he said, pointing to
big wealth
creation in the oil and gas industries - particularly in the
Southwest. Another
key region is the West Coast, renowned for innovation in areas
such as Silicon
Valley and Palo Alto, CA. While technology-driven wealth tends to
be somewhat
less liquid, it is significant given the US’s profound focus on
innovation and
technology. “We are very focused on serving entrepreneurs in that
space,”
Charrington said.
Charrington notes his firm’s
ability to meet this segment’s needs. Clients seeking to do an
IPO of their
firm, for example, would work closely with Citi’s investment
bank, he
explained. “I think what’s probably slightly different about us
compared to
other private banks in this country is that our private banking
operations are
inside our institutional clients business.”
Other specialty areas
include its law firm group – which provides wealth management
services to firms
and attorneys – and which represents just under a third of Citi’s
overall
business conducted in the US.
The firm’s sports advisory
and finance group is a team dedicated to providing lending
services, cash,
treasury and other investment services to sports leagues and
high-profile
sports teams, while also working with individuals to buy and sell
sports teams.
“They’re not acquisitions you can make unless you’re worth a
certain amount and
they’re very interesting people for us to get to know. It’s a fun
but very
serious business for us to be involved in,” Charrington said.