Company Profiles
EXCLUSIVE: Citi Private Bank's Client Acquisitions Are Strong, Clients Value Safe Direction
This publication recently sat down with the global head of Citi Private Bank to ask about strategy, the general flow of results, and how the firm positions itself in uncertain times.
Citi Private
Bank has logged a 70 per cent rise in new client acquisitions
in the first quarter of 2023 compared with a year
ago. That follows a strong gain in 2022, the US firm told
this news service recently, as it discussed how it intends to
stay on the front foot.
“Many of the clients we are dealing with have global challenges
and have a presence in a number of countries. It is a global
network, and with a global set of opportunities,” Ida Liu, global
head, Citi Private Bank said in her firm’s offices in Canary
Wharf, London.
With Citigroup exiting consumer banking across 14 markets to
redeploy resources in areas including wealth management, the
winds appear to be set fair for Liu’s part of the group.
This news service spoke to Liu at a time when the banking world
has been rocked by the demise and state-backed rescues of
Silicon
Valley Bank and First Republic
Bank in the US, and that of Credit Suisse in
Switzerland. In the latter case, it is a particularly significant
private bank and wealth management house – and its takeover
by UBS changes the landscape. Some clients may be considering
diversifying.
“Clients want to diversify and don’t want to put all their eggs
in one basket,” Liu said.
“They [clients] view us as a very steady, global systemic and
safe bank with a very safe balance sheet and diverse sources of
revenue streams around the world,” Liu continued.
Liu has been the global head of Citi Private Bank since April
2021. Prior to her current role, she was the North America
private banking head for more than two years. Holding a variety
of senior positions, Liu has been at the US banking firm since
2007 and she’s not the only prominent female leader at Citigroup,
of course. Jane Fraser became CEO of the bank a month before Liu
took on her current role, and Fraser is the first female chief
executive in Citigroup’s history. Fraser has been changing the
structure and focus of a firm that prides itself on its size and
breadth. As Liu said in the interview, this is a lender with an
on-the-ground presence in 95 countries. As far as the private
bank is concerned, it has 52 offices in 20 countries.
“We are the only private bank that can serve clients around the
world seamlessly,” Liu continued.
Family mindset
Liu said that since taking the role, she’s changed the focus of
the private bank from looking at “the individual” to the
“family,” arguing that in most cases, the family dimension
is crucial as clients build and plan.
“There’s a huge opportunity for us,” she said.
Citigroup, like some other bulge-bracket banks, offers services
to family offices – a rapidly growing market. In Singapore, for
instance, hundreds of family offices have been launched in recent
years.
They need support services, access to bank balance sheets,
technology, and investment expertise, particularly at the smaller
end of the spectrum.
One trend Liu noted is that private companies today prefer to
take family office capital rather than from other sources, seeing
it as a more stable channel. This is particularly significant
given the secular shift towards privately held companies in the
past two decades. Tighter credit conditions amidst the SVB saga
in the US, for example, mean that family offices are more likely
to be tapped for capital.
Liu knows that the current market cycle is difficult for all
banks, given the recent rises to interest rates, shifts in market
cycles and valuations. “It is a dislocated market at the moment,”
she said.
“We think this is a great opportunity for us to put our best foot
forward to lead on advice. Clients need that more than ever,” Liu
added.
To view the most recent financial results from Citigroup, click here.