Family Office
Nomura plans new Asian wealth-management campaign

Japanese giant boosts efforts to capture wallet share in Asia,
Middle East. Japanese Nomura is expanding its wealth-management
business in Asia and the Middle East. The campaign is a response
reaction to a steady increase in Gulf-region wealth and the rapid
growth of Asia's rapidly developing economies and a consequent
rise in personal affluence.
"We are very encouraged by the support given by our clients and
we are very optimistic about business prospects going forward,"
says Kunio Watanabe, head of Nomura's wealth-management division.
"To achieve our long term goal of becoming a strong and reputable
wealth-management business and providing our clients with
excellent service delivery, we will invest in infrastructure and
systems, build up our product and service platform, recruit
talented and experienced people, and further develop staff
expertise."
And there's the potential rub, says Alois Pirker, a senior
analyst with Aite Group, a Boston-based business consultancy.
Though Nomura has been an Asian "ex-Japan" wealth manager for
more than 30 years, its move to expand its presence on the ground
will push it up against a litany of other big-name players in a
fight -- evidenced in the private-bank defections roiling
Singapore -- for seasoned wealth managers with knowledge of the
local languages and cultures.
"Besides the oil-rich nations in the gulf, India and China have
been prime targets for the likes of UBS, Credit Suisse, Citi,
Merrill Lynch [and] Morgan Stanley," says Pirker. "Hiring the top
talent required to enter these markets, however, has become
increasingly more difficult, since people with experience in
these markets are rare and the large wealth management firms are
paying top dollar for these people."
All these players are chasing wallet share in a region with a
fast expanding pool of affluent individuals.
In 2005 the number of U.S.-dollar millionaires in the Middle East
increased 9.8% over 2004 levels to about 300,000, according to
consultancy Capgemini's most recent World Wealth Report -- and
thanks mostly to rising oil prices. Total assets held by Middle
East-based millionaires increased 19.7% to about $1.2
trillion.
The growth of Asia's high-net-worth population is due to the
region's strong, though far from homogenous, economy. South
Korea, India and Indonesia have the world's fastest-growing
high-net-worth populations. Taken together, China and Japan hold
more than 65% of the region's total $7.6 trillion in high-wealth
assets.
The number of individuals with at least $30 million in net
financial assets, jumped by 12.1% to 15,600 in 2005 -- a year
that Capgemini says epitomized "the world's slowing trend
following 2003's crest."
Watanabe has moved to Nomura's Tokyo headquarters to Hong
Kong.
Noruma has also made former Merrill executive Andy Yong regional
head of trustee services. He will be based in Singapore. -FWR
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