People Moves
VP Bank Closes Hong Kong Office; C-Suite Figures Depart
The Liechtenstein-headquartered group, which established the Hong Kong office in 2006, is pulling out of the Asian city, and said it will provide more detail on 20 August. The CEO and COO in the Hong Kong operation have left.
VP Bank is shutting
its physical presence in Hong Kong to focus on Singapore, while
Pamela Phua, chief executive and Heline Lam, chief operating
officer, have decided to leave VP Bank in Hong Kong, the
Liechtenstein-headquartered group confirmed to this
publication.
“VP Bank is physically withdrawing from Hong Kong and focussing
on the Singapore location. The Asia region, where VP Bank has
recorded double-digit growth rates in the intermediaries’
business in recent years, remains important for our bank,” a
statement from VP said.
The bank said the closure is part of measures on which more
details will be given in an annual media conference on 20
August.
VP Bank said the office closure is not related to its
relationship with China-based Hywin Wealth Management, in which
it bought a 3.4 per cent stake in 2021. As reported here, in
early July, the problems engulfing China’s debt-laden property
development group Evergrande
hit Hywin Holdings, a US-listed business. At the end of June,
it announced that it was quitting the wealth management and asset
management business and pivoting to the tech sector instead.
Hywin told this news service in early July that some of its
business entities, such as those in Hong Kong, were not affected.
VP Bank said it did not distribute Hywin's real estate
products.
“This [office closure] decision is not related to the
co-operation with Hywin,” the bank said last Friday when asked
about the matter.
Departures
Phua joined VP Bank in July 2021 after two years at Pictet as
head of Asia family office. She worked at Julius Baer and Credit
Suisse in their private banking units. Lam became COO in April
this year after more than three years as chief of staff in Hong
Kong.
VP Bank established its Hong Kong office in 2006. It launched its
Singapore office in 2007 and received a banking licence from the
Monetary Authority of Singapore the following year.
On 17 May, VP Bank said its net profit for the first months of
2024 slumped by 50 per cent on a year earlier, and a “key reason
for this is lower interest income.”
“After benefiting from the positive interest rate environment in the previous year, VP Bank’s interest income fell in the first four months of 2024, continuing a trend that began in the second half of 2023. This was due to the further shifting of client funds from current account balances to time deposits and securities that bear higher interest rates, a consequence of the changed interest rate environment,” it said. “This resulted in net profit for the first four months of 2024 that is 50 per cent lower compared with the previous-year period. Operating expenses fell slightly compared with the prior-year period. The net new money inflow currently stands at 1 per cent on an annualised basis.”