Technology
Credit Suisse's Private Bank Goes Chatty

Private banking clients with accounts in Singapore and Hong Kong - who use digital platforms - can now employ the "chat" tech. This is part of a trend shaping how such firms interact with clients.
Another large bank has embraced the power of “chat” technology
for wealth management clients.
Yesterday, Credit
Suisse announced that it is making Apple Business Chat
available to private banking clients with accounts in Singapore
and Hong Kong who use digital private banking.
Clients can use the chat system to communicate with their Credit
Suisse team, such as getting information on their account
balances and investments. In the next phase of the product
rollout, more geographical booking centres and features will be
added, such as letting clients make their own trade orders.
“Approximately 95 per cent of our clients booked in Asia who
access our mobile digital private banking platform are users of
iPhones or iPads, so they can now communicate with us anytime
anywhere through their preferred chat channel,” Francois Monnet,
head of private banking for North Asia, Credit Suisse, said.
With private banks embracing mobile platforms and digital
channels – sometimes to augment advisors’ client reach or to
replace RMs – more such chat features are coming out. For
example, DBS, the
Singapore-based banking group, has launched DBS Wealth Chat, a
service that will allow DBS’ wealth clients to interact, exchange
ideas and transact with their relationship managers via instant
messaging platforms WhatsApp and WeChat.
The “chatbot” revolution is one of the themes of the
digitalisation of wealth management in Asia. This publication
reported in March that Citigroup rolled out a service on the
Facebook Messenger channel for all its consumer banking
customers.
A report last June by MyPrivateBanking
Research, the Switzerland-based firm, identified the most
popular “chat” facilities used by wealth management firms. The
study, titled Digital Wealth Management in Asia: Focus on
China and India, analysed the strengths and weaknesses of
the digital wealth management of the ten largest wealth managers
in China and India. It focuses on firms' offerings to their high
net worth clients and how these compare with the market’s needs
and expectations. In China, it was found that 80 per cent of
wealth managers use WeChat, which is seen as the most important
digital channel. Chatbots are used by four out of ten wealth
managers, all of which are local players, and chatbots are
intergrated into their WeChat accounts, website and/or mobile
application. Also, the report found that universal banks focus on
their retail client sector more than private clients when it
comes to technological innovation.
Last June, OCBC, the
parent of Bank of
Singapore, also introduced a chatbot to answer employees’ HR
queries.
Older digital fans
In a separate but related story, Citigroup’s new chief executive
in Hong Kong said that her firm is targeting a wider range of
wealth management clients, other than rivals, by going after
older as well as younger customers, a media report
said.
Angel Ng Yin-yee told the South China Morning Post that
she has been struck by a surprising phenomenon taking place in
Hong Kong, since taking over the local reins in May. Older
customers, she said, are keen on online banking – it is not just
so-called Millennials who are the main technology users.
The US banking giant will be just as focused on over 50 year-olds
as it is on the younger generation, as it launches its latest
digital offering, which is targeting clients with at least HK$1.5
million ($192,000) to invest, the newspaper said.
“It is a myth to believe that only young customers like to use
their smartphone or computer to handle their bank transactions,”
Ng was quoted as saying.