A new one on me
Ageing population drives boom in elite private banking, says BNZ
SUPPLIED/BNZ
4
January, 2015
Donna
Nicolof heads up BNZ's private bank and family office services,
says: "It's a growing part of the business. In the last three
years we have doubled in size."
Private
banking for the very wealthy is booming as ageing business owners
cash up.
Donna
Nicolof, BNZ's head of wealth and private banking, says BNZ's private
bank had doubled its funds under management in the past three years.
With
$3 billion of funds under management, the private bank had a growing
importance to BNZ, Nicolof said. It had 50 private bankers around the
country, each looking after 20-60 clients.
Private
banking is banking for the "one per cent," the wealthiest
people in society. All the big banks have private banks, and becoming
a customer of one usually follows a tap on the shoulder.
People
often get the invitation after selling a business, and with the
greying of the population, an increasing number of business sales are
taking place.
Recent
research suggests some 5000 middle sized businesses earning between
$2 million and $25m are predicted to be put up for sale in the next
five years, and just over 190,000 smaller businesses are expected to
put on the block
Private
banking is high-touch banking, with a heavy focus on wealth
management.
"These
people have been comfortable with debt," Nicolof✓ said.
"They
have taken on debt to build and run their businesses. They have got
to a point where they sell those businesses, and they have got all
that money to invest, but they have never really thought about how to
do it."
He
said former business owners often had had all their wealth tied up in
a small number of businesses, and had little experience of investing
more widely.
BNZ's
use of the term "family office" on its private banker
business cards points to the growing need for help in managing more
than their customers' banking and investments.
The
presence of a private banker at a recent Philanthropy New Zealand
charity event was because the very wealthy often turn their minds to
philanthropy later in life.
Nicolof
said private bank clients two key preoccupations were their children,
and giving something back to the society in which they prospered.
"Philanthropy is high on their agenda," she said.
"They
typically have two big things they think about; What their legacy
will be... and how do they treat their children."
The
term family office is of European origin, and refers to wealth
management offices set up by the ultra rich to manage their own
wealth. A number of what could be described as discrete family
offices have been set up by wealthy families in New Zealand, said
Nicolof.
Not
only do family offices manage investing for the family, but they also
help the family do a lot more, such as managing their philanthropic
efforts, and helping them with things like trusts to protect and pass
on their wealth for future generations. BNZ's adoption of the term
family office recognised the opportunity in providing those services
within its private bank, contracting in experts where necessary.
There
are no public figures showing how big private banking is in New
Zealand, Nicolof said, but added: "We are not the largest
private bank in New Zealand, but we are the best."
BNZ's
private bank was named New Zealand private bank of the year in the
global private banking awards
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