Japan's Nomura poised to start China retail brokerage
business: CEO
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[January 16, 2018]
By Taiga Uranaka
TOKYO (Reuters) - Nomura Holdings Inc
<8604.T> is ready to serve wealthy Chinese as soon as the world's
second-largest economy allows foreign financial institutions to open
securities brokerages, the chief executive of Japan's biggest brokerage
and investment bank said.
"We have been preparing to start business in China for years. We are
waiting first in the queue for when the country eventually opens up,"
Koji Nagai told Reuters.
Nomura already serves wealthy Chinese from retail operations in Hong
Kong, and offers wholesale - or business-to-business - services in
mainland China.
"But we want to do retail business (in mainland China) as well, like we
do in Japan," Nagai said in an interview.
China has been gradually opening up in recent years, and stunned the
finance industry in November when it unveiled plans to allow foreign
control of domestic financial institutions.
Banks such as Citigroup Inc <C.N> and Credit Suisse Group AG <CSGN.S>
could take advantage of the change by taking majority control of joint
ventures they operate with local partners, industry insiders said.
For its part, Nomura aims to establish a retail brokerage targeting
China's growing affluent class, said Nagai, Nomura's chief since 2012.
"In terms of per-capita GDP, China is nearing the stage where mass
consumers start needing brokerage services," Nagai said, referring to
gross domestic product.
Still, he said Nomura is taking a long-term view toward Chinese market.
"It will take time to make it a real business. We are hoping to become
profitable in five to 10 years at the earliest."
More immediately, he said Nomura needs to build up investment banking
operations in the United States, noting its size does not match a market
which generates over half of the global investment banking industry's
fee revenue.
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Nomura Holdings' Chief Executive Officer Koji Nagai attends an
interview with Reuters in Tokyo, Japan, December 27, 2017. Picture
taken December 27, 2017. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
"We have strong sector coverage in Japan, Asia and Europe. There is a missing
link in the United States and we need to fill that," he said.
He also said Nomura could pursue both organic and inorganic growth opportunities
in the United States. "If we see good opportunities to hire bankers, we will do
so, and if there is a good boutique house, we might buy it."
"Anyway, we are not aiming to compete squarely with bulge brackets. We are an
investment bank with strength in Asia and we will connect that with Europe and
the United States," he said. Bulge brackets refers to global financial
institutions such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc <GS.N>.
On bitcoin, Nagai said his bank is "studying" the cryptocurrency but has no
plans, for instance, to enter the platform business such as by running an
exchange.
Bitcoin has shot up in value in recent months, conjuring fear of a mostly
speculation-driven price bubble destined to collapse. In September, JPMorgan
Chase & Co <JPM.N> Chief Executive Jamie Dimon called bitcoin a fraud.
Nagai said while the cryptocurrency's recent price movement appears to be highly
speculative, "I wouldn't brand bitcoin as bad or the situation akin to the tulip
bubble" of the seventeenth century, when the price of tulips famously
sky-rocketed before spectacularly crashing.
(Reporting by Taiga Uranaka, Taro Fuse and Takahiko Wada; Editing by Christopher
Cushing)
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