Strategy
EXCLUSIVE: UBP's Asia Chief Aims To Take Bank To New Heights After Winning Licence

Union Bancaire Privee finally received its merchant bank licence from the Singapore regulator, a move that delights UBP's Asia CEO as the firm looks to expand.
Swiss private bank Union Bancaire Privee finally
received its merchant bank licence from the Monetary Authority of
Singapore on 1
November, a move that delights UBP's Asia chief
executive as the firm looks to expand.
An upbeat Stephan Repkow, chief executive for Asia at Union Bancaire
Privee, told this publication about his optimism after
securing the licence from Singapore’s
regulator.
“Since last Friday we have officially commenced business as
a merchant bank in Singapore.
It is a great achievement for the team, in Singapore and at
head-office. All of
whom have been working hard to get there. We are thrilled to now
start on this
second phase of building our Asian franchise and being able to
learn from our
competitors’ experience,” Repkow said.
“We are determined to keep on building the team with
exceptional and experienced professionals while bearing in mind
that the key
for success in a new banking business today is to maintain a
reasonable
cost-base while we grow our AuM and revenues,” he continued.
“This is also why we have decided to outsource our
back-office and IT infrastructure. We are also working on a
systematic
open-architecture structure to source the best products and
investment
opportunities; helping to keep a lean and mean organisation and
provide our
clients with best-of-breed solutions,” he said.
Repkow concluded: "Servicing our clients as their
trusted adviser while being mindful of our own bottom-line is the
best way to
develop a sustainable banking presence in Asia.
And with UBP being a family-owned and run bank with very strong
financials, we
can also ensure that we have a long term commitment to our
clients to build our
Asia franchise: we understand that we are
starting a marathon, not a sprint."
UBP is one of a number of European-headquartered private
banks that have sought to break into the rapidly expanding
Asia
market for high net worth and ultra high net worth clients. The
bank is
competing in a market with players such as UBS, Credit Suisse and
Julius Baer,
as well as locals such as Bank of Singapore and DBS Group. UBP in
early October spoke
about some of its specific approaches in an interview with this
publication. (See here.)
The local market has, meanwhile, witnessed some merger and
acquisition speculation. Societe Generale, the French banking
group, is
reportedly looking to sell its Asia private
bank, although UBP’s name hasn’t emerged as a potential bidder.
UBP recently
bought international private banking operations from UK-listed
Lloyds Banking
Group, seen as part of a consolidation in the Swiss and European
markets Societe
Generale reports its third-quarter results today and has so far
declined to
comment on the M&A speculation about its Asia business.