People Moves
Pictet Recruits Julius Baer's CEO
The man who has led Julius Baer since late 2009 is moving to a rival Swiss private bank. Julius Baer's share price fell, down around 6 per cent today.
Boris Collardi, who has been chief executive of Julius Baer since 2009,
is joining rival Swiss bank Pictet in what is one of the
most high-profile job switches in the private banking industry in
the past 12 months. The hire is being hailed as a coup not just
for Pictet but for Geneva's private banking sector more
generally.
Collardi will move to Pictet from mid-2018 “at the latest”,
Geneva-headquartered Pictet said in a statement today.
In his new role, Collardi will be jointly responsible for
Pictet’s global wealth management business, alongside Rémy Best,
the managing partner who has had sole charge of this division
since December 2014.
He will join the existing six managing partners, who are, in
order of seniority, Nicolas Pictet, Renaud de Planta, Rémy Best,
Marc Pictet, Bertrand Demole and Laurent Ramsey. The appointment
is the first time an "outsider" has joined the Pictet senior team
in almost two decades. Renaud de Planta was the last outside
executive at Pictet, joining from UBS in 1998. Since him, there
have been four internal promotions: Remy Best, Marc Pictet,
Bertrand Demole and Laurent Ramsey (source:
Bloomberg).
“The fact that he is joining us is a powerful endorsement of our
commitment to independence, organic growth, and focus on the
long term, always in the best interests of our clients,”
Nicolas Pictet said.
Collardi has been CEO at Julius Baer since October 2009, making
him one of the more long-standing business chiefs in the private
banking business. It is a period that has seen Julius Baer, a
standalone, listed private bank, push hard at becoming one of the
main foreign-owned wealth management players in the Asia
region.
Julius Baer confirmed that Collardi was going, saying in a
statement that its board of directors has appointed Bernhard
Hodler as CEO with immediate effect. The board will evaluate its
long-term leadership, it said. It is relatively unusual for a
bank to state that one of its senior managers is leaving for a
rival.
Shares in Julius Baer fell on the news, perhaps reflecting
concerns about future business strategy at a time when Collardi
had been associated with a drive into markets such as Asia.
Julius Baer has expanded under his watch, most notably with the
purchase of the non-American wealth arm of Bank of America Merill
Lynch about four years ago. A report by Bloomberg said that
Julius Baer only learned of Collardi's decision to leave at
the weekend. A significant Julius Baer shareholder Harris
Associates was among those expressing disappointment at the
departure, which sent Julius Baer shares down the most in 17
months, the report said.
Hodler, who has been chief risk officer, was named deputy to
the CEO in September. He has been a member of Julius Baer’s
senior executive team since 1998 and has held various senior
positions, including chief operating officer and president
of the management committee of the bank.
Collardi is leaving a firm that said it was looking back at a
highly successful year. Last week, it reported record assets
under management of SFr393 billion ($401 billion), driven by
inflows above its 4 to 6 per cent target range.