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EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: We Did It! Now For The Task Of Integrating Coutts International, Says UBP

Tom Burroughes

28 April 2015

With the benefit of hindsight, when the official news broke that from Royal Bank of Scotland, it had a feeling of inevitability about it.

Why? Because anyone who has been paying close attention to Geneva-headquartered UBP will have seen how this bank has been determined to grow into one of the top-rank “standalone” private banks. When this publication spoke less than a year ago to Michel Longhini, its private banking head, he made it very clear that acquisition was part of its strategy of pushing ahead to build scale – a key issue at a time of rising cost burdens in the business. (See that interview here.)

So with the Coutts acquisition agreed, this publication grabbed a chance to talk to Longhini again – not in Geneva, but this time in Singapore at UBP’s smart offices that overlook the Asian city-state’s gleaming financial district. And the location is no accident: Singapore, and the wider Asia-Pacific region, is a big part of UBP’s plans and a reason why it bought the Asia-based business of Coutts (as well as the Coutts business in Switzerland).

Inevitably, a question that has to be put is how confident is UBP that it can persuade the clients as well as staff of Coutts to come across and keep attrition rates down. Industry-watchers will, for example, want to see how the deal compares with other M&A deals such as ABN AMRO's purchase of the German business of Credit Suisse, Julius Baer's Merrill Lynch deal and DBS's acquisition of the Asia private bank of Societe Generale.

“We expect to have a smooth transfer in Asia and bringing in almost all the infrastructure and we trust attrition will be limited. In Zurich, we don’t expect a lot of overlaps and we are confident that we have done the necessary due diligence on Coutts. There were already strategic moves started by Coutts several years ago and these will be completed in June this year,” Longhini said.

UBP hasn’t disclosed how much it has paid for the Coutts business – although this publication understands that some media speculation that it paid up to $800 million for the Coutts business is way above what was actually paid. Recent analysis by Scorpio Partnership, the consultancy, and others, has suggested that banks are currently forking out about 2.1 per cent on average for the AuM they buy – it appears that UBP paid less than that.

Longhini said that because Coutts had been regularising Swiss accounts and dealing with other issues, he and his colleagues were not expecting unpleasant surprises. And in general terms, he said he is pleased that the additional SFr30 billion (around $31 billion) of assets, with a sizeable chunk (slightly less than half) coming from Asia, will take UBP to an important level.

“It dramatically adds to our presence in Asia,” he said. “The coverage in Switzerland and Eastern Europe think? How comfortable is the RM with the buyer; sometimes acquisitions fail because people from the seller cannot be integrated,” Longhini said.

“In a service-based and relationship-based model it is important to keep a team….our track record on that has been good,” he continued.

Asked about “re-papering” or “re-onboarding” of clients, Longhini said: “In our experience we have kept it extremely smooth…We think for Coutts in particular all the hassle of re-opening accounts will be extremely limited,” he continued.

UBP has processed a number of acquisitions in recent years, and Longhini hopes the experience of this willstand it in good stead in making the Coutts people feel welcome. In 2011, UBP bought the Swiss arm of ABN AMRO; in May last 2013, it bought the international private banking segment of UK-listed Lloyds Banking Group (it has, as a result, since set up UBP-branded operations in Monaco and Gibraltar). It has added hedge fund assets via M&A also and bought a book of business from Santander.

“For example, with Lloyds or other deals, we have been able to really maximise the integration and limit attrition,” Longhini added.


New opportunities, digital caution
On other issues, Longhini talked about the work he wants to step up at UBP in working with external asset managers. “We have a very strong presence in Switzerland with external asset managers and have been partnering with financial advisors for many years. Surprisingly this sector is not so developed in Asia, although it is expected to develop,” he said. This is a potentially promising growth area of business for UBP, Longhini said. (This publication worked with Coutts in Switzerland last year to explore, via an in-depth research report, the potential business that private banks can achieve by serving external independent wealth managers in the Alpine state.)

Asked about the topic of digitalisation of private banking and the buzz around such a trend, Longhini takes a low-key approach. “To assert that private banks can replicate real relationship-driven business by digitalisation is a mistake. Private banking is a relationship business and it …I know Asia clients are fed up with it,” he said. Relationship managers spend, on average, 13 years at UBP, a fact that Longhini gave with some pride.

The latest acquisition of this bank will, of course, take time to bed down and the long-term proof of its success will in part be judged by the durability of client relationships and the sustainability of such a business model. What is for sure is that this Geneva-based bank is determined to make a serious go of it.