SINGAPORE
- In the 1470s, the prominent Spinola
family of Genoa had an apprentice business agent in Barcelona named Christopher
Columbus helping to handle their shipments, preparing the young sailor for his
later voyages of discovery to the New World.
These
days, that Italian clan and other ultra-affluent families are moving assets to
Singapore by setting up family offices in a city-state often touted as the
Switzerland of Asia.
Wealthy
people from Europe and the Americas have long looked to the East for ways to
build and preserve their fortunes.
But
only recently have they started opening family offices - private companies that
manage the trusts and investments of rich households - in the region in
earnest.
"Because
Asia has been a place where we've been investing very heavily - more than 50
per cent of our assets are in Asia for the last 15 years - we feel a need to
come closer," Federico Spinola, son of the family patriarch, told Reuters
from New Caledonia, a Pacific archipelago known as the "Land of Eternal
Spring".
Campden
Wealth, which provides research and data on family offices, says up to 10
European family offices have moved to Singapore since the financial crisis in
2008, bringing US$5-$10 billion (S$6.2-12.5 billion) worth of assets with them.
Singapore,
a global banking and investment centre in the heart of Southeast Asia, is an
attractive base for its efficient registration process, relatively benign
regulations, smooth movement of money, financial infrastructure and low tax
rates.
Clean
and safe, it also offers high-end shopping, fine dining, casinos, luxury
hotels, golf courses and marinas filled with super-yachts to help the wealthy
spend and unwind.
Asia's
prospects are alluring as economies in Europe and the United States look weak.
After the crisis, regulatory pressures in the West and a crackdown on offshore
centres have hastened the pace of family offices moving to Singapore and Hong
Kong.
"The
families want to be where the action is," said Munish Dhall, a UBS
executive director and head of ultra-high net worth offering and client
development. "They want a piece of the economic pie."
"We're
basically shareholders"
Big
financial institutions, feeling the pinch of a tougher investment banking
climate and higher capital requirements, are taking note - and looking to get
their own piece of the action.
UBS, a
Swiss banking giant, has set up a family office team that is looking to cater
to two dozen clients in Asia who have assets of US$200 million or more.
Other
global players like Credit Suisse, HSBC and Canada's RBC Wealth are also
courting family offices, along with Singapore-based DBS Group.
The
Spinolas, whose ancestors include crusaders during the Middle Ages, cardinals
of the Holy Roman Empire and influential figures in the politics, culture and
prosperity of Genoa, are one of those families. But they are doing things their
own way.
Last
year, representatives of the family began setting up an office in Singapore to
manage their investments in the region, rather than using their Geneva-based
operation Parly Company SA.
It is
still early days for Parly Singapore as it applies for licences and tests its
bespoke portfolio management tools.
The
plan is to hire senior investment managers from top banks over the next year,
with the 10-15 members of the team working under an advisory fee model rather
than on commission.
"We
are a family company and the family is not involved in the business. We're
basically shareholders," said Spinola, who sits on a management committee
with several relatives and now has permanent resident status in Singapore.
By
keeping family and investment matters separate and allowing Parly managers to
make decisions, he said, "that is a way of differentiating risk."
The
Spinolas are clubbing together with two other family offices to cut costs and
leverage on efficiencies.
Parly
officials declined to identify the partners, other than to say they are
"household names" in Europe - one is an English entrepreneur who has
donated much of his money to charity and the other is a Swiss-based family.
Spinola
would not discuss the amount of investment in Parly Singapore and neither would
its managing director, Roxanne Davies. But she did give a clue.
"A
family office with such a strategy can't really exist - it is not economically
feasible - without half a billion,"Davies said.
Tougher Regulations
Campden
Wealth counts about 2,500 family offices around the world. In Asia, it says,
there are 150-200 - roughly half in Australia and Japan - but the number is
growing alongside the surge in new wealth in China, India and Southeast Asia.
A
recent survey by Campden and UBS showed the amounts being managed by these
family firms range from US$50 million to more than $1 billion, with an average
return of 9.1 per cent over the 12 months to October 2011.
The
goal for the Spinolas and other family offices is simple: control their wealth,
maximise returns and minimise fees charged by commission-hungry money managers.
Concerns
about the health of big banks and dismay at their hard-sell tactics that pushed
products of dubious merit onto high net worth clients - such as mortgage-backed
securities that turned toxic - are other factors.
"Singapore
is tightening offshore rules but it will continue to be a very attractive place
for family and investment offices," said David Bain, Campden Wealth's head
of research."No government in the world is so committed to attracting the
money of the ultra-high net worth."
Wealthy
families from Europe, more so than Americans, are looking to set up shop in
Asia because of the banking situation in Switzerland, Luxembourg and
Liechtenstein, said Donald Riegger, a Singapore-based expert on family offices
at Deloitte & Touche LLP, a global accounting and advisory practice.
"It's
picking up steam," said Riegger, adding Singapore is on the map as a
financial centre and as more family wealth shifts to Asia in an overhaul of
portfolios.
"I'm
not really getting much of a sense that they're fleeing something to come here
... For a US person, they're not going to avoid that (taxes) but if you're a
European looking for a better tax structure, Singapore could work well."
Taking care of business
Spinola,
who worked at Italian drinks group Martini & Rossi and managed agricultural
firms in Argentina before setting up Parly in Geneva in 1993, is no stranger to
investing or to Asia.
Now he
and his family want a more direct link to how their money is managed in the
region, although success is not certain given the volatility of markets and the
variety of political, investment and regulatory risks in many Asian countries.
"We
are trying to move away from hot money, high-frequency trading and things that
have price discovery that we just cannot control," Davies said. "If
we are able to target single digit returns of 6-7 per cent annualised in
today's market, we would think of ourselves as very lucky."
Pending
approval from the authorities, she said, Parly will move the "centralised
thinking process" from Geneva to Singapore, which has been "very open
to new ways of wealth management and financial technology that surrounds
it".
Parly's
portfolio is more heavily weighted towards equities, with investments mainly in
energy, commodities, healthcare and biotechnology stocks. It also invests in mezzanine
finance, bridge financing and types of structured credits.
In
Asia, Davies said Parly is interested in opportunities in the consumer sector,
Japanese innovations and venture capital, especially in technology firms.
If the
model works, Parly Singapore will be open to investing on behalf of other
wealthy families.
Spinola,
whose passions are classical music and animal protection, still has ties to
Europe. He owns one-fifth of Tassarolo.
Reuters
Business & Investment Opportunities
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