People Moves
Exclusive: Julius Baer’s Deputy Chief Of Asia Joins Ahead of Schedule

Julius Baer’s new deputy chief of Asia and head of North Asia Kaven Leung, started his role in Hong Kong last week, two months before schedule.
They say it makes a good impression to turn up early on your
first day of a new job. But coming into the office over two
months ahead of plans, Kaven Leung may
be taking this to extremes.
Julius Baer’s new deputy chief of Asia and head of North
Asia Kaven
Leung, started his role in Hong Kong last week, global
chief
executive Boris Collardi confirmed to this publication.
His appointment, though announced in November, was not due
until 19 April. Sources close to the
situation said that he was able to negotiate with his former
employer to leave early.
The 25-year private banking veteran joined Julius
Baer from Goldman
Sachs where he was co-head of the Asia ex-Japan private banking
business.
Previously, he worked at Citigroup for two decades, most recently
as chief
executive of global wealth management Asia.
He reports directly to Thomas
Meier, chief executive of the
Swiss bank’s Asia business. He takes
over the role being managed by Meier on an interim basis. Meier
took up the job
temporarily after Andrea Benenati quit the bank in 2010 to found
an
independent asset manager in Switzerland.
The extra management firepower will be a welcome fillip to Julius
Baer, which is ramping up its efforts in the region it calls its
second home market. Last November the bank hired a team of eight
en
masse from Bank Sarasin’s Asia division, headed by Elina So. It
also formed a joint venture with Macquarie's Asia-Pacific
business last year, which included absorbing its private client
division into its ranks.
Yesterday at a
journalist briefing in Singapore, Collardi said a focus was
growing the bank’s
Asia assets under management from 15 per cent currently. He added
that a large chunk of the SFr10 billion ($10.8 billion) of new
money that flowed into the bank last year was from Asia, without
breaking out figures.