Print this article
Independence Remains Big EAM Force; Sector Faces Compliance Challenges – HP Wealth Management
Tom Burroughes
8 April 2025
One quality that often drives founders to start an external asset manager (EAM) is a thirst for independence. And clients are particularly open to new models when there’s a financial crash or traumatic event. “It turned out it was probably the best time to set it up because clients didn’t trust their banks anymore,” Brutsch said. Market focus Nominations are open for the Fourth WealthBriefingAsia EAM Awards, 2025, with the public announcement in Singapore, on 16 October.
When Urs Brutsch (main picture) and Michael Foo founded in Singapore, in 2009, they operated in the aftermath of the worst financial crisis since the Wall Street Crash. Banks were bailed out, and HNW individuals and business owners went back to the drawing board to consider how they wanted their money to be handled. They were fed up with a commission-driven culture, potential conflicts of interest, and a lack of closeness to an advisor.
Brutsch is now managing partner of a firm that has 30 people and, since 2013, has had a family offices services firm. HP Wealth Management (which does not disclose its exact AuM) is today located in Telok Ayer Street in the Asian city-state. Besides Brutsch and Foo (chief investment officer and partner), there is Stephane Schmid, partner, and a number of relationship members and other staff.
In Brutsch’s case, he came into the EAM business after a long spell in banking. Arriving in Singapore in 1986 as a Credit Suisse trainee, he has stayed in Singapore ever since. Brutsch moved to ABN AMRO in 1999 to run its Asian private banking arm, and returned to Credit Suisse’s group in 2004. And then the Global Financial Crisis happened. Ironically, it turned out to be the change Brutsch needed.
Busy sector
As explained here in this overview of EAMs, HP Wealth Management is among several EAMs, family offices and other non-bank wealth players that have proliferated in Singapore and the wider Asia region. Over the past decade or so, several major banks have operated as custodians to EAMs; new players are also entering this field. And one reason for change and competition is compliance.
Over time, Brutsch thinks that EAMs will use fewer custodians in total, with newer financial organisations breaking into a space that has been dominated by private banks. In HP Wealth Management’s case, it works with to tighten standards as much as possible. (MAS issued a report on the situation in June last year.)
Client frustration about onboarding times is a real problem for the sector, Brutsch said. “The hurdles we must jump over have got higher.”
“The banks are overstretched…the reason is that they have junior people on these , a provider of client lifecycle management, know your customer and transaction monitoring solutions, found that Singapore's banking sector faces an "unprecedented" challenge as the number of clients abandoning banks due to slow and inefficient practices has surged to record levels. Nearly 90 per cent have lost clients over the past year due to delays and inefficiencies in onboarding, rising by more than a third (35 per cent) from the level in 2023.
So what is weighing on clients’ minds?
A major question that comes from clients is about the markets (this interview was conducted before Trump jolted global markets with his tariffs), Brutsch said.
“You have stretched valuations in terms of equities; geopolitics is more explosive than model is almost without retrocessions. Most RMs want to sell structured products and so on. That’s not our model,” he said.
The EAM sector, in general, looks vibrant, Brutsch said. Among organisations such as the Association of Independent Wealth Managers (Singapore), new firms join regularly.