Strategy

UHNW Clients Are Bypassing Banks, Threatening "Kodak Moment" - UBS

Tom Burroughes Group Editor July 3, 2019

UHNW Clients Are Bypassing Banks, Threatening

A thirst for direct investing, club deals and other approaches that cut out investment banks in some ways threatens a "Kodak moment" for parts of the financial services industry, a senior figure warns. This publication is now closed for the July 4 vacation and will resume on July 8.

Ultra-high net worth clients bypassing traditional financial institutions and doing private deals directly is a trend that puts some banks at risk of becoming irrelevant, a top UBS executive has warned.

Joe Stadler, head of UHNW clients at UBS, pointed out in an interview (Bloomberg, July 2) that family offices, for example, are increasingly completing deals with each other on direct investments, preferring such areas to listed stock markets because their yields are thin. 

The banker referred to the idea that some banks face a “Kodak moment” – a term referring to how the renowned US photography business was crushed by its failure to embrace digital technology. 

UBS and some of its peers have pushed into the UHNW client space more emphatically in recent years – the Swiss bank’s annual billionaire report with PricewaterhouseCoopers, for example, demonstrates how it showcases its work with such clientele. There has long been debate about whether there is actually a “sweet spot” for wealth managers, based on the idea that mass affluent/lower-HNW client services are increasingly commoditized and driven by tech, while UHNW clients, such as those in the $50 million-plus range, are labor-intensive and difficult to serve easily, given their capital needs.

Stadler’s comments chime with those of other bankers who have told Family Wealth Report and its sister publications in Europe and Asia that a rising enthusiasm for direct investing, club deals and forms of joint venture among family offices and other ultra-wealthy investors are changing the business landscape. 

It poses the question of whether shrinkage of banks’ balance sheets, while understandable post-2008, has made such lenders less appealing for UHNW clients who have multiple business interests, cross-border currency exposures and a desire to borrow against their collateral. UHNW individuals, particularly at the higher end of the spectrum, will typically have several banking relationships, shopping around in some cases for the most favorable credit solutions.

A few days ago, a former senior banker at Julius Baer, the Zurich-listed private bank, founded his own specialist business, Azura. Ali Jamal has told this publication that a major requirement for UHNW clients is that they want access to banks’ balance sheets but are sometimes frustrated and need help to negotiate terms. (An interview with Jamal is forthcoming.) 

The balance sheet shrinkage and de-risking trend continues. There is media speculation that Deutsche Bank, for example, will shed thousands of jobs at its investment banking side and certain other areas, although this week it also signaled that it is to hire up to 300 client-facing staff in wealth management between now and 2021. At UBS, the bank has shrunk the relative size of its investment bank and put more focus on wealth management since 2008.

The trend towards DIY-style direct investing may also reflect some clients’ frustration at the “product-push” business model associated with large, integrated banks where private banking, investment banking and asset management sits under the same roof. In the US, for example, the expanding wealth firm Cresset makes a big point about its ownership model, which it says aligns managers with what clients need in the long run. (This news service has also delved into what practitioners mean by truly “independent” wealth advice.)

Direct investing - while it carries due diligence costs and risks of its own - also shows how the banking sector is as prone to disintermediation and disruption as other economic sectors have been in recent years, whether they be hotels and travel, retail, manufacturing or logistics. A number of technology platforms and businesses are also making it easier for private client investors to access hedge funds, private equity and debt, and other once hard-to-enter asset classes, which also tends to work against traditional channels such as investment banks.

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