Julius Baer to offer private equity to ultra-wealthy clients
Julius Baer has poached a senior executive from rival Swiss wealth manager UBS to set up a new division offering private equity and debt investments to its ultra-wealthy clients.
This content was published on
3 minutes
Owen Walker
The move illustrates how a prolonged period of low interest rates has forced the likes of UBS and Credit Suisse to prioritise offering illiquid private investments to their super-rich clients, who agree to forgo access to their capital in the hope of achieving higher returns. For the banks, the higher fees that these funds typically charge can mean increased revenue for them.
External Content
Giuseppe De Filippo will join Switzerland’s third-largest bank in October along with three other members of his team at UBS. He will then recruit a larger team to focus on direct private investments.
“We saw a massive increase in interest in this space prior to Covid-19, mainly because of the quest for yield but also because some of the private businesses our clients can invest in are really attractive,” said Luigi Vignola, head of markets at Julius Baer. “We definitely were lagging [UBS and Credit Suisse] in the past because we didn’t have anything like this.”
Global assets in private equity and debt hit $5 trillion last year, according to data provider Preqin, and private assets have been growing at 10% annually in recent years.
De Filippo’s defection to Julius Baer comes just weeks after UBS announced internally that he would lead private markets distribution for Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Switzerland. De Filippo previously held global positions leading the bank’s direct investments group and corporate finance division.
The change in role was made as part of a shake-up of UBS’s wealth management business under co-heads Tom Naratil and Iqbal Khan, which is aimed at cutting costs and aligning the business closer with investment banking.
When Khan joined UBS from Credit Suisse last year, his departure caused ructions in the normally staid world of Swiss banking. Revelations that Khan and his family had been followed by private investigators led to the departure of Credit Suisse’s chief executive, Tidjane Thiam, and his chief operating officer, Pierre-Olivier Bouée, in a boardroom shake-up.
In February Philipp Rickenbacher, Julius Baer’s new chief executive, announced sweeping changes at the private bank, including cutting 300 jobs and ending relationships with wealthy clients that were no longer profitable enough. This followed a 37% year-on-year drop in net profits.
The group reported an 8% fall in assets under management to CHF392 billion ($417 billion) in its first-quarter results in May.
Julius Baer has been hit with sanctions by the Swiss markets regulator for its shortcomings in fighting money laundering. In February, the Financial Market Supervisory Authority banned Julius Baer from carrying out large acquisitions due to its connections to alleged cases of corruption between 2009 and 2018 linked to Petróleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), a Venezuelan state-owned oil and natural gas group, and Fifa, international football’s governing body.
In 2018 Julius Baer closed its office in Panama after Matthias Krull, an employee working in the country, pleaded guilty in the US to conspiracy to commit money laundering in connection with PDVSA funds.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2020
Popular Stories
More
Swiss Politics
In Switzerland, New Year brings ‘burka ban’ and pension hikes
Have you heard something about Swiss diplomacy that you’d like us to fact check?
Not all information circulating about Switzerland’s foreign relations is accurate or well understood. Tell us what you'd like us to fact check or clarify.
Swiss man found dead in Iranian prison had allegedly collected soil samples
This content was published on
The Swiss man who died in an Iranian prison is said to have secretly taken soil samples beforehand, according to Iranian media.
This content was published on
Hackers have attacked the Swiss federal administration. Among other things, telephones, email and various federal websites and specialist applications were affected.
More and more Swiss celebrities and institutions leaving X
This content was published on
The short messaging service X has also lost its reputation in Switzerland. More and more personalities and institutions are turning their backs on tech billionaire Elon Musk's platform.
Driver going wrong way causes accident in Gotthard tunnel
This content was published on
A 76-year-old driver going in the wrong direction caused a head-on collision on the A2 motorway in canton Uri on Friday. Five people were injured.
Opponents of Crans-Montana ski work appeal to Federal Court
This content was published on
Opponents of the new finishing area stadium for the national piste in Crans-Montana, site of the 2027 Alpine World Ski Championships, have appealed to the Swiss Federal Court.
Environmental responsibility initiative goes too far for Swiss government
This content was published on
Natural resources must be conserved, but not to the extent demanded by the environmental responsibility initiative, say the Swiss government and parliament.
SWISS plane back in Zurich after emergency landing in Austria
This content was published on
Two-and-a-half weeks after an emergency landing in Graz in which a crew member died, the SWISS Airbus involved has returned to Zurich.
Bern scientists recover ice core dating back 1.2 million years
This content was published on
An international research team with Swiss participation has successfully recovered the oldest ice from the Antarctic to date.
This content was published on
Swiss wealth manager Julius Bär will cut 300 jobs this year as it looks to boost profitability after a double-digit percentage earnings fall in 2019.
Julius Bär ordered to repay CHF153 million missing German funds
This content was published on
A Swiss court on Wednesday overturned a previous verdict that Julius Bär should not he held responsible. The Swiss wealth manager has been pursued for damages by a German state department that tracks down assets from the former East Germany. Julius Bär has always maintained that it was not to blame, having acquired a German…
Swiss wealth manager picks new boss to boost performance
This content was published on
Hodler will continue to assist Rickenbacher into 2020 as the bank seeks to reduce annual costs by CHF100 million ($101 million), including a 2% reduction in headcount by the end of this year. Hodler will then end his 21-year association with Julius Bär to “pursue other projects”, the bank said in a statementExternal link. Rickenbacher,…
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.