Ecuadorian bankers target wider LatAm

When the global financial crisis struck in September 2008, Ecuador’s banks barely flinched. Sure, the global crisis hit the South American country hard, shrinking markets for Ecuadorean exports, hammering the price of the OPEC member’s oil, and spilling tens of thousands of Ecuadorean overseas workers into the streets, undercutting remittances sent home.

Wiser after a wrenching systemic crisis in 1998-2000 that led two dozen banks into bankruptcy and even made the country drop its currency in favour of the dollar, the banking system continued liquid. Ecuador’s isolation from foreign markets limited the contagion: exchanges weren’t exposed to sophisticated derivative products and banks and corporations weren’t exposed to instruments that turned toxic.

Foreign banks meanwhile have largely turned a blind eye to oil-rich Ecuador, with Lloyds ending a near-century of its own presence in August 2010, making it the last major foreign bank to close shop. But this exodus has been less a consequence of Ecuador’s tumultuous recent political history than a retrenching of the Dutch, US and British banks in the wake of successive South American crises from the late 1990s to early this century and the subsequent global crisis.

No-one knows the opportunities of the attractive playing field they’ve left behind better than Quito’s most prestigious investment bank: Analytica. Its in-depth local knowledge of Ecuador’s complexities has been crucial in finding numerous sub-radar opportunities, all the while drawing on its home-grown management’s international expertise and network. And its success has been clear almost from its start in 1996: none of its clients lost money in the Ecuadorean crisis.

Bankers Ramiro Crespo and Eduardo Checa have formed Analytica’s double leadership since 2005. Mr Crespo is Analytica’s general director and main partner; a former Edward S. Mason fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, with business and economics degrees from Georgetown and Maryland Universities. He previously worked at Citibank and National Westminster in New York. He has been on the board of directors of Quito’s stock exchange, Ecuador’s central securities deposit company, and the country’s mining chamber. Mr Crespo has been quoted by numerous local and international media companies including The Economist, the Wall Street Journal, Reuters, Dow Jones Newswires and CNN. He has also published articles in local magazines Vistazo and Vanguardia and has expertise in the aviation industry. Before joining Analytica, Mr Checa, who also has a US business degree from the University of Wisconsin-Stout, was ING Group’s country manager for Ecuador from 2000 to 2003 after being Vice President and Head of Corporate Finance. He was also Second Vice President at Chase Manhattan and has held executive positions at several local banks. Mr Checa also advised the conservative Durán Ballén government and now manages Analytica’s business activities, including mergers and acquisitions, its brokerage, fund management, and research. The combination of local and international experience brings both the proper networks and depth of knowledge for market leadership helping to link the local with the global market. “We’re already looking at the whole of Latin America and creating a regional platform,” says Mr Checa. “We’re working in trading and swaps of debt, private equity and M&A, obviously with international partners.”

The privately-held boutique investment bank with 15 full-time staff members has thus made its mark in advising numerous important local transactions. Emerging from Ecuador’s InvestBan, it weathered the turn-of-the century crisis, in fact becoming one of the leading institutions in Ecuador’s unusual back-to-private sector drive. Unlike Chile, Mexico or Argentina, neo-liberalism never really took hold there. But in 1998-2000, bankrupt financial holdings had to pass their assets to a government deposit-insurance authority, AGD, amid the massive bailout. AGD in its decade of existence slowly re-privatised companies, including under the present administration, on several occasions enlisting support from the bank. Among other fallout from the crisis, Analytica crucially guided foundations which successfully participated in United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit interpleading proceedings over sovereign debt swaps. This is one of the rare cases worldwide where plaintiffs won a case against a sovereign lender.

Among important deals, Analytica sold a 45 percent share in Ecuador Bottling Company, the exclusive Coca Cola bottler, for local groups Emprogroup S.A. and Nobis. “We strengthened the position of the minority shareholder in the sale,” says Mr Crespo. Another transaction linked to global heavyweights included negotiating Alliance Capital’s debenture restructuring in mobile phone carrier Porta, now by far Ecuador’s biggest company in its industry, forcing its sale to Mexican magnate Carlos Slim’s América Móvil.

Beyond the local market, the global financial crisis has actually helped to accelerate trading and unleashed potential as clients have restructured portfolios. “The international market has given us a lot of opportunity as there’s a lot of debt that has a market to be reallocated, swapped,” says Mr Checa. Investors with appetite for risk are now looking at red-hot emerging markets not just in Latin America but also Asia. “We structure debt and participate with major international investment banks in the development of debt issuance,” Mr Checa adds. On this backdrop, Ecuador is one of the untold stories, with numerous undervalued assets.

Local companies meanwhile are being aided in structuring their debt optimally and acquiring overseas credit. Dollarisation has helped bring much-needed economic stability to Ecuador, and the oil windfall and remittances sent home have filled public-sector and private pockets with cash. Demand for new cars is so high that Quito, the capital, has introduced restrictions based on licence plate numbers, and cities like Guayaquil and Cuenca are poised to invest heavily in public transit schemes. Retailers continue to expand, with a $100m, 350-store shopping mall – Ecuador’s biggest – that opened early August in low-income southern Quito. Analytica’s early recognition of the area’s potential led it to structure the country’s biggest-ever private real estate project, 8,000-house unit Ciudad Jardín, nearby. “We developed the financial product, sold it to important Spanish real estate developers, and for a time remained as investors in one of the projects with 33 percent,” says Mr Crespo. At the national level, companies like conglomerate Eljuri, grocer La Favorita, and lorry importer Mavesa have grown to establish major local operations – La Favorita dominates both the supermarket segment and the stock markets. Foreign companies are eyeing the growing insurance market. Investors have been snapping up dollar-denominated obligations issued by locally important companies like Pinturas Cóndor or international giants like Nestlé in local exchanges.

In Ecuador, Analytica is uniquely suited to assist small- to mid-sized companies in developing and professionalising their businesses. Many companies here are family-owned or run as family businesses, requiring help in both setting up adequate corporate governance and managing debt. Since 2008, in a programme sponsored by regional multilateral development bank Corporación Andina de Fomento (CAF) and the Inter-American Development Bank, Analytica’s brokerage division Analytica Securities has been designated by the Quito Stock Exchange (BVQ) as the sole securities house in Ecuador qualified to design and implement corporate governance programmes for clients. This is an essential tool in creating value for numerous growing clients. A client carrying out this type of organisational review will have easier access to the financial market. CAF, BVQ and Ecuador’s state-owned Corporación Financiera Nacional, among others, provided seed capital for Fondo País, a trust that invests in shares and other securities of select local startups offering high potential and high return. Mr Checa is a director of the fund.

The pointedly heterodox and socialist approach some governments are pursuing, including that of Ecuador, has slowed gross domestic product growth. Banks have been on the defensive, accosted by government reduction of interest rates, fees and minimum domestic deposit rules – all of these with little impact on Analytica given its specialisation. By sheer luck, the government debt default of 2008 came at a time when hedge funds needed liquidity because of the world credit and financial crunch. The subsequent buyback offer at a 35 percent discount therefore apparently found enough takers to be dubbed successful, but isolated Ecuador from the international capital markets. Administrative blunders led to the country’s blacklisting by world anti-laundering body Financial Action Task Force early in 2010, although the administration has taken important, albeit grudging, steps to correct the situation. With external financing arriving slower than expected for government infrastructure projects, officials have begun to make clearer commitments to welcoming foreign direct investment. Following Ecuador’s maverick bond default, in August 2010 Standard & Poors increased the remaining bond’s credit rating to B- from CCC+ with a stable outlook, citing increased willingness to honour the debt. A somewhat toned-down state of the nation speech by President Rafael Correa, also in August, may reflect greater realism.

If Ecuadorean politicians were to get their act together, they could quickly unshackle growth to match that of the blistering pace of Colombia and Peru over the last few years. Slow macroeconomic growth does show the costs of the ever-boiling cauldron of Ecuadorean politics. One of the most dangerous ideas − and one Mr Crespo outspokenly criticised − was a plan to reduce transparency in central bank accounting. The administration has sought to accelerate growth by directing funds deposited by local banks and the Ecuador’s central bank at very low interest rates overseas into investment projects in the real economy. Unfortunately, its own policies have maintained significant uncertainty, slowing the demand for credit. The plan was to sidestep these concerns and give the central bank’s executive board extraordinary discretion over the use of deposits, including the purchase of private-sector securities. Fortunately, the legislature failed to approve the bill. For now at least, the financial sector looks firm.

Like its name indicates, Analytica’s prize-winning team has from the start produced research that sets it apart from its peers. Analytica distributes the Ecuador Weekly Report offering unparalleled insight into politics and the economy compared with both other banks and major media. Written in lively, succinct English, it is one of the top sources of timely information on the country, drawing its content from frank discussions among prominent local and international minds. Its sources include top Ecuadorean business leadership, but also draw on politicians across the ideological spectrum, the diplomatic corps, scientists, journalists, and the armed forces. Analytica is also sponsoring a university in Quito, Universitas Equatorialis, offering degrees in business administration and − because Ecuador is one of the most biodiverse countries on the planet – environmental engineering, with Fundación Natura, the local chapter of the World Wildlife Fund. Analytica executives are in constant contact with academia, as professors, thesis directors, conference panellists and writers of scientific articles. Mr Crespo is also on the board of the Kapawi Lodge, an internationally famous, pioneering tourism project. Deep in the Ecuadorean Amazon, rainforest warriors from the Achuar people now manage a luxury ecotourism resort, supported by the board.

Mergers and private-equity transactions continue even as, irrespective of political noise, companies are growing up. Across Latin America there are thousands of successful, emerging companies with financial needs the big multinational banks aren’t considering given their still relatively small size. Smaller local banks, meanwhile, mostly lack the expertise to handle what these customers are looking for, even as the companies to date lack some financial sophistication. “A large regional market is being created by companies buying and selling but who aren’t necessarily among the biggest,” says Mr Checa. These clients need a tailor-made experience, which Analytica is providing. Analytica is currently advising a Colombian client planning an acquisition in Peru, he adds. Local business groups have bought assets in Peru and even Venezuela. For companies in trouble, Analytica assists them in landing softly. “We also help companies that are going under find a soft landing for all stakeholders, in a country lacking Chapter 11 and similar rules. We have also pioneered in issuing obligations, providing securitisation and helping in debt conversions and their placements” says Mr Crespo, who has vast expertise in trading foreign bonds. Unusually among investment bankers, Analytica’s partners have successful personal experience in industry and business as entrepreneurs. These ventures include world-class flower exports, beverage and supermarket retail, as well as real estate. Real-world experience is one of the reasons for Analytica’s success.

For more information about the Ecuador Weekly Report Tel: (593-2) 222-6640; www.analytica.com.ec

Autonomy sees upside to 2011 EPS consensus

British software firm Autonomy said it was confident there was upside for earnings consensus for 2011, even after organic growth slowed in the third-quarter as some contracts were delayed.

The company, whose software searches and organises unstructured information such as emails, phone conversations, documents and video, reported a 10 percent rise in revenue to $211m, at the top of its own guidance.

Autonomy warned earlier this month, however, that revenue for the full year would be three percent lower than it expected, sending its shares sharply down.

Chief Executive Mike Lynch said that the downgrade was taken on “conservative assumptions” around the timing of deals, and there was no change in fundamental demand for its products.

“We are confident in maintaining our view of the outlook for demand and expect to continue to deliver good EPS growth in 2011, with upside to current market consensus,” he said.

Analysts expect the company to report full-year revenue of about $973m and earnings per share of about $1.24 in 2011, according to the company.

Adjusted pretax profit in the third quarter rose 34 percent $86.3m and adjusted EPS rose 25 percent to 25 cents.

World stocks hit two-year high, led by emerging markets

World stocks hit a two year high on Thursday, touching levels not seen since September 2008 just after the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

Emerging market stocks led the way, touching levels not seen since June 2008.

MSCI’s all-country world index, a leading benchmark used by professional investors, was up 0.8 percent in the day at around 319. This was the highest level since Sept. 22, 2008.

The index was up around 0.8 percent on the day, some 85 percent above its financial crisis low in March 2009.

MSCI’s emerging market benchmark was up more than one percent on the day. It has risen 14 percent this year.

Japan questions South Korea G20 leadership over FX

Japan has called into question South Korea’s leadership of the Group of 20 forum because of Seoul’s interventions to stem the won’s rise and insisted its own currency action was qualitatively different.

“As chair of the G20, South Korea’s role will be seriously questioned,” Yoshihiko Noda told a parliamentary panel when asked about South Korea’s currency interventions.

Record low interest rates in rich countries have pushed global investors into emerging markets in search of higher yields, driving up their currencies.

In response, several governments have stepped into foreign exchange markets or tried to curb capital inflows, raising fears of a currency “race to the bottom” that may trigger protectionism and hobble global growth.

Japan itself intervened in the currency market in September for the first time in more than six years to try to stem a rise in the yen that threatens its fragile economic recovery.

Noda drew a distinction between that action and more frequent intervention by South Korea and China.

“In South Korea, intervention happens regularly, and in China, the pace of yuan reform has been slow,” Noda said.

“Our message is that we have confirmed at the Group of Seven that emerging market countries with current account surpluses should allow their currencies to be more flexible.”

South Korea did not immediately comment on the remarks.

No consensus
Pressure on China to allow its currency to rise faster is likely to intensify but hopes for a G20 consensus look slim.

German Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle was quoted as saying Beijing should make concessions to avoid foreign exchange tensions turning into a trade war.

“China bears a lot of the responsibility for avoiding an escalation,” Bruederle told Handelsblatt newspaper.

China’s insistence that the yuan’s rise must be gradual is a huge obstacle to the appreciation in Asian exchange rates policymakers say is needed to reduce global imbalances.

It, and other countries, counter that the prospect of the Federal Reserve printing money again will flood the world economy with more liquidity, weaken the dollar and push emerging currencies yet higher.

“It’ll be impossible for the G20 to reach a consensus on currencies. Many emerging economies feel that they are being forced to intervene because of a weak dollar,” said Etsuko Yamashita, chief economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.

“China will not succumb to outside pressure.”

Minutes of the Fed’s last policy meeting showed its policymakers thought easier policy may be needed “before long” to bolster a struggling recovery.

China’s chief G20 currency negotiator Cui Tiankai said Beijing was trying to avoid a currency stand-off but that no specific currency should be on the G20 agenda.

“We are doing our best to avoid that,” Cui, a foreign vice-minister, said on the sidelines of a conference in Seoul. “But it requires efforts of all the G20 members, not China alone.”

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said he saw no risk of a global currency war but on the need for a stronger yuan, he added: “We just want to make sure it’s happening at a gradual but still significant rate.”

The major world currency not being talked down is the euro, as the European Central Bank ponders a reversal of ultra-loose policy while the Fed is poised to ease further and Japan has already cut rates to zero.

“In the G4 space, the ECB is the only central bank that is talking of an exit policy and that is helping the euro,” said Ankita Dudani, G-10 currency strategist at RBS.

Analysts said Tokyo’s criticism of Seoul stemmed from its worries about competitiveness. The yen is up about 13 percent against the dollar this year, the won only about four percent.

“Japan feels it has been under pressure not to intervene because of G7 rules but people outside seem to be playing by different rules,” said Robert Feldman, chief economist at Morgan Stanley MUFG Securities in Tokyo.

Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan urged Seoul and Beijing to act responsibly but acknowledged Tokyo’s delicate position.

“I want South Korea and China to take responsible actions within common rules, though how to say this is difficult because Japan has also intervened,” he told lawmakers.

Japan sold 2.1 trillion yen ($26bn) in September to curb the yen’s strength versus the dollar. South Korea has intervened to the tune of about $13bn since late September but analysts said it has acted more aggressively in relative terms.

HK stocks hit 2010 high on central bank easing hopes

Hong Kong stocks rose to a 2010 high on October 6 as investors poured money into local assets on expectations of another round of asset purchases by the US Federal Reserve to stimulate the economy weakened the dollar.

Mainland banking shares, which have a large weighting on the benchmark index, joined the rally after sharply underforming throughout the year.

The Hang Seng Index was up 1.08 percent at 22,884.65 at the midday trading break, moving further into technically overbought territory according to its relative strength index, currently at 78 and well above the threshold 70 level.

With several large cap constituents on the Hang Seng Index already up as much as 20 percent over the past month, investors shifted focus to laggards such as banks.

“Mainland banking shares were hit earlier this year by a weak market coupled with the risk that China would tighten policy by curbing lending or raising capital requirements,” said Mark To, head of research at Wing Fung Financial in Hong Kong. “But with market sentiment improving, investors are chasing laggards and retail as well as institutional investors will likely look to build positions in banks, which are trading at fairly attractive valuations.”

China Construction Bank Corp (CCB), up 2.5 percent, had the biggest positive impact on the main index. Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd (ICBC) rose 1.9 percent.

ICBC shares have fallen 8.5 percent this year compared with a 4.6 percent gain for the Hang Seng Index.

Mainland banks are trading at discounts to their long-term valuations based on their forward twelve-month price-to-book as well as price-to-earnings multiples.

ICBC trades at a 20 percent discount to its ten-year median price-to-book ratio of 2.4. CCB trades at a 17 percent discount.

Property developer Hang Lung Properties Ltd rose 4.9 percent and was the top gainer on the benchmark index. Hang Lung had largely missed the September rally in local property plays, partly due to its exposure to the mainland market.

Hang Lung is up 10.6 percent since the end of August compared with an about 20 percent advance for rivals Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd and Cheung Kong (Holdings) Ltd.

Bucking the trend, footwear retailer Belle International Holdings Ltd fell 4.4 percent as investors continued to pocket gains after a rally to a life high on Monday.

Turnover on the Hong Kong stock exchange was about HK$62bn in the morning session, more than the 200 full-day moving average, according to traders at Standard Chartered, helped partly by share placements from China Everbright Ltd and Zhongsheng Group Holdings Ltd.

A sustained recovery in trading activity after the summer lull has lifted Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd to the highest level since May 2008 and up nearly 30 percent in the past month. HKEx was up 1.9 percent.

BOJ reverts to zero rates, pledges to buy more assets

The Bank of Japan has pledged to pump more funds into the struggling economy and keep interest rates at virtually zero, surprising markets and stealing a march on the Federal Reserve in providing a fresh dose of economic stimulus.

For months, the central bank had eschewed government calls for more decisive action, such as buying more government bonds, focusing instead on a limited funding scheme.

But in the face of growing evidence that the yen’s strength was hurting the economy, the Bank of Japan cut its overnight rate target to a range between zero and 0.1 percent from 0.1 percent and pledged to buy 5 trillion yen ($60bn) worth of assets.

It also said it would keep its benchmark rate effectively at zero until price stability is in sight. Core consumer prices have been falling from a year earlier since early 2009.

The purchases would roughly match the size of extra stimulus being considered by Prime Minister Naoto Kan’s cabinet.

The assets, ranging from government bonds and short-term government securities to commercial paper and corporate bonds, would come under a temporary scheme that would also cover 30 trillion yen of such assets as collateral under an existing loan programme.

“The BOJ is bringing its monetary policy closer to quantitative easing, allowing market rates to hover near zero and pledging to keep a near-zero interest rate policy in the longer term until prices stabilise,” said Naomi Hasegawa, senior fixed-income strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

BOJ policymakers have signalled in past weeks that they were considering a further easing of policy after Tokyo’s intervention in the currency market in mid-September to check the yen’s strength offered only temporary relief.

Most market players, however, had expected the central bank to opt for a relatively minor adjustment of its 30 trillion yen loan scheme that supplies banks with funds at its 0.1 percent rate.

“These steps are more aggressive than markets had expected. The BOJ’s decision is a surprise and will have an impact on currencies due to the message it delivers.”

Central banks under pressure
The surprise move weakened the yen against the dollar, pushed up Japanese government bond futures and helped stock prices turn positive.

The decision to cut interest rates was made by a unanimous vote, but board member Miyako Suda opposed the inclusion of government bonds among the types of assets the BOJ could buy using its pool of funds.

The BOJ is not the only central bank under pressure to do more to support an economy that is showing signs of faltering.

Financial markets expect the Fed to embark upon another round of asset buying to bolster a sluggish recovery as early as its November meeting. There are also calls within the Bank of England for further easing, although the bank has kept markets guessing on whether it will indeed do so.

In Japan, slowing export growth, a surprise fall in factory output and companies’ worries that the strong yen may hurt the outlook have heightened the case for the central bank to ease policy.

The BOJ had already been edging nearer to quantitative easing by allowing the yen pumped into markets through currency intervention to remain in the financial system, instead of draining it.

GM posts gain amid still-slow US auto market

General Motors Co posted an annual sales gain of 10.5 percent in September amid evidence that the U.S. auto market remained stuck in a slow-moving recovery at the start of the fourth quarter.

GM was the first of the major U.S. automakers to report sales for the month.

Analysts and industry executives expect auto sales near 11.5 million vehicles on an annualized basis in September, almost flat from August after adjusting for the typical early fall slowdown.

GM said it expected industry-wide sales had fallen to a range of about 970,000 to 980,000 vehicles in September compared with sales of over 997,000 in August.

“Consumers are sending a very clear message that they will be cautious with their spending,” GM sales chief Don Johnson told reporters and analysts.

Despite the still-slack demand for new cars that analysts link to consumer concerns about weak housing and new hiring, GM said there were positive developments in its September sales.

The sales results were one of the last snapshots in demand that investors will see for the top US automaker before an initial public offering expected in November.

Johnson and other GM executives said the automaker was heading into the fourth quarter with a much higher share of new models than it had held a year earlier, reducing the pressure for incentives.

GM spent about $3,300 in incentives per vehicle on average to close sales in September. That represented a discount of about 10.7 percent of the average cost – in line with the industry’s average.

Johnson said GM would remain disciplined in pricing and avoid the temptation to rely on more aggressive discounts to drive sales volumes.

“It’s the economic recovery that has to drive our sales,” he said. “Is it slower than everyone would like? Potentially,” Johnson said.

GM was restructured in a bankruptcy funded by the Obama administration and the government is counting on an IPO to reduce its nearly 61 percent stake in the automaker.

For September, GM posted a year-on-year sales gain of 22 percent in the four brands that it opted to keep while in bankruptcy: Chevrolet, Buick, GMC and Cadillac.

Retail sales accounted for about 75 percent of GM’s sales, with the remainder to fleet operators led by car rental agencies. It has also gained retail share every month this year, executives said.

Industry-wide sales for September face an unusually easy comparison to 2009 when the auto sales rate was an anemic 9.2 million vehicles.

That exceptionally weak sales rate represented what analysts called a “hangover” from the expiration of the US government’s popular cash-for-clunkers sales incentives a month earlier.

For that reason, many analysts will look at the comparison between September and August sales rates for a better sense of the trend.

Iraqi banks need $10bn in three years

Iraq has signed multi-billion deals with oil firms to boost output capacity to 12 million barrels a day in seven years.

This could give Iraq the money to rebuild after decades of war, sanctions and economic degradation, opening opportunities to the banking sector in financing projects. Today, Iraqi banks are hardly lending to private companies due to limited capital.

“The banks so far have not been able to lend in any structured manner,” Eric le Blan, chief operating officer of boutique investment firm MerchantBridge, told reporters.

MerchantBridge owns a majority stake in an Iraqi lender, Mansour Bank, which plans to raise its capital to $150m.

Le Blan said that to meet the new regulatory requirements and an increased demand in lending by the private sector banks needed to raise at least $10bn over the next three years.

Lack of experience
New rules by the central bank force Iraqi banks to raise their capital to at least 250 billion Iraqi dinars ($214m) by 2013, according to a memo seen by reporters.

Capital could come from regional banks, in particular from Lebanon, as well as from some international banks, said le Blan.

He said risks to foreign investors included Iraq’s lack of experience with banking failures. The higher capital requirements were expected to force Iraqi banks to consolidate.

“You are going to see a few leading banks surviving and the rest falling apart very quickly,” said le Blan.

“The central bank is still in training mode.”

Iraq is in a political impasse after general elections in March produced no outright winner and as yet no new government, a vacuum that observers say slows down government spending and the development of the country’s state institutions.

Switzerland scrambling to keep wealth crown

Switzerland, at risk of losing its crown as the world’s top wealth management hub to Singapore, is seeking a deal on billions of dollars of untaxed money hidden at its banks, under pressure from cash-strapped foreign nations.

Last year Europe and the US, hungry for tax revenues after numerous bank bailouts, forced Switzerland to weaken its prized bank secrecy and extracted promises from the placid Alpine nation to help fight tax evasion.

That, together with a bitter US tax fraud probe into wealth management giant UBS, opened cracks into the rock-solid reputation of the $2trn Swiss wealth management industry. UBS paid a hefty $780m fine to settle US tax fraud charges in February 2009 and agreed, in accordance with the Swiss government, later that year to disclose Swiss bank data belonging to around 4,500 of its US clients.

Pressured from all corners, Berne was forced to swiftly devise a strategy to keep Switzerland on the global financial map, whose cornerstone consists in negotiating deals with large European neighbours aimed at allowing those who hid money in Switzerland to pay their way out of it without risking jail.

Helvea analyst Peter Thorne estimated last year that Swiss banks hold 726 billion Swiss francs ($722.4bn) of undeclared European assets.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble, who is holding talks with his Swiss counterpart, has promised such a deal by the end of October.

“I am very convinced we will find a solution,” said Walter Berchtold, head for Private Banking at Switzerland’s second-largest bank Credit Suisse.

“It is extremely important as customers need clarity, our staff needs clarity and the bank needs clarity in order to (re)develop our business model and attract new assets from that region,” said Berchtold, one of the world’s most influential private bankers.

Although the Group of 20 nations said last year it sought to eradicate tax evasion in all major offshore centrws, it is Switzerland that has so far borne the brunt of the attacks since it alone manages nearly one third of global offshore wealth, data from the Boston Consulting Group showed.

Tax evaders
European assets make up about 50 percent of foreign assets held in Switzerland. A large portion of undeclared money, known as “Schwarzgeld” or black money, came from Germany and Italy and was smuggled into the country starting in the 1960s, when income taxes started to rise in Europe.

Italy, which has an endemic tax evasion problem, acted pragmatically last year by offering its citizens a generous tax amnesty that brought nearly €100bn back home.

But Germany would not feel comfortable with a deal that allows tax cheats to come off lightly while millions paid what they owed.

“The Swiss legacy money issue needs to be resolved,” said Hans-Uelrich Lauermann, a partner with PriceWaterhouseCoopers in Frankfurt. “The problem is that a solution needs to be politically acceptable in Germany.”

Tax experts say an aggressive campaign by German tax police, which included paying for stolen data of Swiss bank account records and a raid at Credit Suisse’s bank branches in Germany, prompted more than 20,000 Germans to turn themselves into the taxman.

The pressure may become only greater later this year, as Germany will make it difficult for tax cheats to escape criminal charges from next January onwards.

Experts expect the Swiss-German talks to be a blueprint for a similar deal with other nations. Even Singapore, which is not under the same amount of pressure as Switzerland, is keeping a close eye on the situation.

“The Singaporeans are closely watching the German-Swiss tax talks as they know that the Chinese may use this as a blueprint,” said Eduardo Leemann, CEO of Swiss-based private bank Falcon.

China new  has become an increasing source of offshore wealth in Singapore.

“It’s not an issue for Singapore right now, but it will be 5-10 years from now. The Chinese want to do it at their own pace.”

Looking east
Even though Switzerland is putting a lot of effort into trying to clinch deals with European nations, private bankers know the bulk of new growth will come from clients in emerging markets, where the rate of wealth creation is outpacing the West.

Singapore, and to some extent Hong Kong, have become the new centres of gravity of wealth management. And their clients are not just from the Asia-Pacific region, but also Americans and Europeans uneasy about the intensifying tax scrutiny in their own regions.

Even clients from the Middle East, the other main source of revenues for Swiss private banks behind Europeans, are now opting to open accounts in Singapore rather than Switzerland.

Hans Nuetzi, Chief Executive Officer at Switzerland’s number three purely private bank Clariden Leu, said his bank had opened a European desk in Singapore following interest from European clients.

“Clients from the Middle East are increasingly interested in Singapore. About 80 percent of the new accounts we opened with Middle Eastern clients were opened in Singapore,” Falcon’s CEO Leemann said.

But any Swiss wealth erosion in favour of Singapore, whose foreign assets now are just a quarter of Switzerland’s, will take time.

According to the 2010 Private Banking Survey by consultancy McKinsey, Switzerland last year experienced net outflows worth one percent of its private banking assets. Those were mainly attributable to transfers by scared European clients.

Switzerland continued to enjoy inflows from Asia, Latin America, Russia and Eestern Europe, confirming its global attraction as a wealth management centre, McKinsey said.

Some of Switzerland’s oldest private banks date back to more than 200 years ago and its polyglot private bankers are used to trading in any currency and any product.

Political stability, the basis on which this neutral country has built its wealth, excellent infrastructure and bureaucratic efficiency, are still valued by rich customers, private bankers say.

The country, already home to super-wealthy individuals of the likes of former F1-star racer Michael Schumacher, pop-singer Tina Turner and IKEA-founder Ingvar Kamprad, is also valued for its quality of life, its excellent schools and the ability to negotiate a friendly tax rate with local tax authorities.

“In the short-term, even though we have some problems with bank secrecy, I still think Switzerland is still extremely well placed,” Credit Suisse’s Berchtold, a former precious metals and options trader said.

“The race will go on, but Switzerland will be leading for quite some time to come.”