Credit Suisse to create
U.S. banking business for billionaire
Send a link to a friend
[July 29, 2016]
By Olivia Oran
(Reuters) - Credit Suisse Group AG,
which exited its U.S. private wealth business last year, is building
out a new investment banking group in the region to serve
billionaires.
Switzerland's second-biggest bank has hired Charlie Buckley from
rival UBS Group AG <UBSG.S> to work with company founders and
entrepreneurs, according to an internal memo reviewed by Reuters on
Friday and confirmed by a spokeswoman. Buckley previously led a team
at UBS focused on family offices.
The group will not provide traditional wealth planning to
ultra-wealthy clients, but instead focus on lending, capital markets
and M&A advice, people familiar with the bank's plans said. It will
target business owners who are already ultra- wealthy, as well as
entrepreneurs in industries like oil and gas, biotechnology and
telecommunications, whose stakes in their companies could be worth
hundreds of millions of dollars, one of the people added.
The bankers might, for example, cultivate a relationship with the
chief executive of a private technology company. When the
entrepreneur is ready to sell the business or take it public, they
could introduce the CEO to Credit Suisse bankers who handle M&A or
stock offerings.
The build-out comes as part of a broader strategic shift at Credit
Suisse in which CEO Tidjane Thiam is scaling back certain trading
businesses and focusing more on wealth management, particularly in
Asia.
Credit Suisse is focusing on areas within the investment bank that
support its wealth management unit, according to a presentation last
October as part of the bank's strategic review.
Credit Suisse is also winding down businesses that require too much
capital or in which it lacks the scale to compete, such as its U.S.
wealth management business.
Wells Fargo & Co last year struck an agreement with Credit Suisse
for the right to recruit U.S. brokers who work for the Zurich-based
bank.
[to top of second column] |
A Credit Suisse sign is seen on the exterior of their Americas
headquarters in the Manhattan borough of New York City, September 1,
2015. REUTERS/Mike Segar
Banks are increasingly trying to provide services to the ultra-rich, which
represents the fastest-growing segment of households.
The United States has the highest number of millionaire households, although the
biggest growth in private wealth is expected to come in Asia, according to a
report from Boston Consulting Group.
Credit Suisse on Thursday posted a surprise profit for the second quarter,
boosting Thiam's efforts to restructure the bank.
(Reporting by Olivia Oran in New York; Editing by Dan Grebler)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|