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Switzerland’s wealth managers bank on a future in Asia

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A man stands on a balcony or terrace, dressed in a dark, tailored suit with one hand resting casually on the railing

The rich have always been welcomed in Switzerland. To spend, but more importantly to hoard. Across the country, in secretive locations, banks operate underground vaults and storage facilities — often converted military bunkers that have been hewn from mountain rock. Some have no roads nearby and can only be accessed by air.

At one facility 40km south of Lucerne, storage company Brünig Mega Safe is carving into an imposing mountain and plans to offer “professional and secure storage of assets in underground caverns” for anything from gold bars and stock certificates to artworks and classic cars. Prices start at $500,000 for a 25 sqm vault.

For three centuries, the country has also offered the rich reliable, specialist advice on managing and investing their money. In times of war, political turmoil and rising taxes, the country’s stability and geopolitical neutrality — combined with its strict adherence to banking discretion — supported a thriving and world-leading wealth management industry.

But, in recent years, those foundations have begun to crack — and its rivals in Asia are looking on. Under international pressure, Switzerland has been chipping away at its banking secrecy laws that restrict banks from passing on details about their clients to governments. And the country’s decision to sanction Russian oligarchs following Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine nearly three years ago has dented its reputation for international neutrality.

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Meanwhile, the collapse last year of Credit Suisse — the country’s second-biggest bank, trusted by millions of wealthy clients globally — has cast a shadow over Switzerland’s claim to be a stable nation with a sturdy financial services sector. The remainder of the Swiss banking sector is aware of what this means. “Singapore and Hong Kong are going to be more and more important competitors to Switzerland as global hubs,” says Giorgio Pradelli, chief executive of Swiss private bank EFG, which operates in all three countries and is increasingly focused on Asia.

A man stands on a balcony or terrace, dressed in a dark, tailored suit with one hand resting casually on the railing
Looking east: Giorgio Pradelli, chief executive of private Swiss bank EFG, which is increasingly focused on Asia © Joel Hunn

In fact, Hong Kong is set to overtake Switzerland as the world’s biggest offshore wealth hub by 2028, with Singapore not far behind. Hong Kong would then account for $3.2tn out of the total $17.1tn in global offshore wealth assets, compared with $3.1tn for Switzerland and $2.5tn for Singapore, according to Boston Consulting Group estimates.

In the five years to 2028, Hong Kong’s cross-border wealth market is on track to grow by 6 per cent a year in terms of assets, compared with 3.6 per cent in Switzerland and 8.5 per cent in Singapore.

“Switzerland will always be our competitor, but we are not afraid,” says Jason Fong, a 27-year banking and asset management veteran who has been tasked by the Hong Kong government with attracting family offices to the Chinese territory. “They are crumbling and we are in a very advantageous situation.”


Much has changed since the early 18th century, when France’s Catholic kings tapped the banks of Geneva for funds, but tried to conceal their dealings with the city’s Huguenot financiers, fearing a sectarian backlash at home. An edict from the Great Council of Geneva in 1713 prohibited bankers from sharing client registers with the authorities.

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Geneva’s commitment to banking discretion helped elevate it into a European financial powerhouse and drew in Swiss mercenary soldiers who were looking to safeguard their money made from fighting abroad. “The Swiss laid the foundation for today’s global wealth management model,” says Iqbal Khan, co-head of wealth management at UBS. “Its heritage comes from the duty of care for others’ property and the principle of self-control.”

Secrecy became enshrined in Swiss legislation with a 1934 banking law, which set out that bankers who disclosed client information could be jailed. Initially, European Jews fleeing persecution set up Swiss bank accounts to protect their valuables, but later such accounts were favoured by Nazis to store their looted wealth. A Swiss bank account soon became the financial product of choice for the rich who did not want too much attention on their fortunes’ sources.

The cover illustration for FT Wealth magazine shows a stylized depiction of the Hong Kong flag in the centre, featuring the iconic five-petal flower with stars inside each petal

This commitment to clandestine banking attracted despots and oligarchs throughout the 20th century, while tax-evading lawyers and country doctors from neighbouring European countries made up a large proportion of Swiss private banks’ clients. It was in the middle of the 20th century that Swiss bankers attracted the nickname of the “gnomes of Zurich” from British politicians for their ability to hoard heaps of gold in underground vaults. It was soon regarded as a badge of honour. Swiss bankers took to answering calls from British colleagues by saying: “Hello, gnome speaking.”

More recently, though, under pressure from tax authorities around the world following a series of high-profile scandals over the flows of illicit money, Switzerland has acquiesced to demands for greater transparency around its banking sector.

In 2017, it signed up to the international automatic exchange of information standard, which requires Swiss financial institutions to share details on their clients with the countries where they are tax resident. More than 100 countries are signed up to the same standard, which has all but killed off Switzerland’s allure for tax evaders.

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The final blow for Swiss banking discretion came two years ago with the Suisse Secrets scandal, where documents detailing the accounts of 30,000 Credit Suisse clients were leaked to a consortium of international media outlets. Among those named in the cache of documents — which dated back to the 1940s — were war criminals, autocrats, oligarchs, drug smugglers and human traffickers.

The collapse of Credit Suisse prompted the Swiss government to devise a series of proposals to bolster the banking system, including giving more power to the domestic financial regulator and potentially increasing UBS’s capital requirements. Executives in Zurich fear that if the new measures are too draconian, they could ultimately put their banks at a disadvantage to their foreign rivals.

A grey-haired man walks past a sign of Credit Suisse attached on the exterior of a building
Casting a shadow: The collapse of Credit Suisse undermined Switzerland’s reputation for stable financial services © Spencer Platt/Getty Images

“Financial centres like Hong Kong, Singapore and the US are aggressively competing, and making great progress, for the offshore wealth management crown that Switzerland holds today,” UBS chief executive Sergio Ermotti said in June. “Foreign financial centres would benefit if Switzerland were to restrict its ability to maintain a leading presence abroad.”

Switzerland’s reputation for neutrality on the world stage has proved enticing over the decades for the global and mobile rich, especially in times of rising geopolitical tension. Yet this, too, is being tested. The decision by Switzerland following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to sign up to the US and EU sanctions regimes has led to questions from clients about whether the country is still an impartial player.

A recent report from the Swiss Bankers Association lobby group identified Switzerland’s adherence to international sanctions regimes as the top geopolitical risk facing the country’s wealth managers. The immediate effect of implementing sanctions was Swiss banks pulling out of Russia and jettisoning Russian clients, many of whom switched their offshore bank accounts to the Middle East.

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Jimmy Lee, head of Asia-Pacific at Julius Baer, has run several western banks’ Singapore and Hong Kong operations over the past three decades. He says he is often asked by clients whether Switzerland is still neutral. “We explain to them that Ukraine is at the doorstep of Switzerland and they are taking a stance,” he says. “If your neighbour’s house is on fire, you cannot stay neutral.”

The Ukraine war has brought Switzerland closer to Nato, with a recent paper commissioned by the country’s defence ministry suggesting Swiss troops could co-operate in military manoeuvres with other states for the first time since 1515.

As Switzerland grapples with its five-century-old commitment to neutrality, rival wealth management hubs have sought to project their own credentials as non-partisan places to do business. “Some of these Asian wealth hubs played their hand extremely well,” says a Swiss bank executive. “They managed to position themselves as neutral, although they all adopted the US sanctions just like we did.”


The story of how Asia’s two main financial entrepôts copied the Swiss white-glove model of wealth management and ended up outpacing their European rival could be seen as a historical quirk — a byproduct of the supercharged growth in Asian wealth in the 21st century. But, in Singapore’s case, it was more by design. It was on a trip to Zurich in 1967, two years after Singapore’s independence from Malaysia, that Lee Kuan Yew set upon the idea of transforming the nation he had founded into Asia’s financial hub. Lee, the country’s first prime minister, had seen the way Switzerland, a small country with few natural resources and surrounded by powerful neighbours, had established itself over several centuries as the global centre of offshore banking and wealth management.

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Singapore’s government followed Switzerland’s lead in designing its tax system to attract rich foreigners looking for a base to park their wealth, while also encouraging Swiss private banks to set up shop. “We have . . . deliberately encouraged the development of Singapore as a financial centre,” Lee said on a subsequent trip to Zurich in 1971 while speaking at a reception at the Union Bank of Switzerland. “Singapore sets out to be to south-east Asia what Switzerland is to Europe — a money and gold market.”


Part of the reason for the rise of Hong Kong and Singapore as offshore wealth hubs is down to demographics and how quickly a wealthy upper class has emerged in Asia in recent decades. Mainland China is now home to 6mn millionaires, the second-highest number behind the US. This weight of money funnelling into Hong Kong from mainland China, which accounts for just under half of the cross-border money flowing into Hong Kong’s wealth managers, according to McKinsey, has driven its rapid growth — even as that of Switzerland and Singapore, to a lesser extent, has slowed.

Column chart of % increase in wealth assets showing Asian wealth hubs have outpaced Switzerland since 2010

This proximity is one of the main reasons UBS recently announced it would move its local headquarters to a tower sitting on top of the West Kowloon train terminus. The new development is designed to connect Hong Kong by high-speed rail to the surrounding Greater Bay Area, the largest and most populated urban area in the world.

By contrast, Singapore acts more like an entry point for global investors into south-east, and increasingly, north Asia. China is expected to account for about 30 per cent of wealth inflows into the city state over the next five years, with Hong Kong and Taiwan the next biggest markets.

A sign of Hong Kong and Singapore’s growing importance as offshore wealth hubs is the booming market for family offices. These small, private companies are set up to manage the wealth of one or maybe a handful of wealthy families, providing a full suite of services, from tax and succession planning to investing and philanthropy. Both Hong Kong and Singapore are on course to report record numbers of launches this year. There were 50 family offices operating in Singapore in 2018, but that has ballooned to 1,650 today. Hong Kong, meanwhile, has more than 2,700.

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The new launches are typically serving families in other Asian countries looking to diversify where their wealth is managed, transferring a large chunk from their domestic market to meet their global interests or give them options if things get uncomfortable at home. Singapore, in particular, is attracting family office branches from further afield. “Some are coming from the Middle East and Europe,” says Jin Yee Young, co-head of Asia-Pacific wealth management at UBS, who runs the Singapore business. “They see Singapore as a window to the region. They are very established, some are even multigenerational family offices, and they are looking to tap into investments in the region.”

When Hong Kong and Singapore were starting to establish their wealth management sectors, they looked to the Swiss model for inspiration. Yet for a long time, the clients had vastly different needs. “When I started in private banking in the 1990s, it was about the private individual and their needs,” says Amy Yo, the other co-head of UBS’s Apac wealth business, who runs the Hong Kong operation. “As things have globalised, 70 per cent of our clients are entrepreneurs and now it is much more about succession planning, looking after their businesses, philanthropy and doing good for society.”

The authorities in Singapore and Hong Kong are working on ways to improve the local talent pools to ensure they can meet evolving client needs. “Whenever I go to the Asian international financial centres, the general discussion is always on how to increase the number of people who are interested in working in wealth management,” says Pradelli of EFG. “Talent is very important. While we traditionally have a strong talent base for our industry in Switzerland, the pipeline of talent in Asian financial centres is strong and improving, but still quite scarce.”

Singapore has had an influx of money from China and Hong Kong in recent years, as rich individuals moved their wealth from what they regard as an increasingly authoritarian Chinese state. But those inflows culminated in a S$3bn ($2.34bn) scandal last year, in which 10 Chinese nationals were convicted of money laundering following Singapore’s biggest investigation into online gambling in Asia. It involved island-wide raids and the seizure of gold bars, expensive wines, crypto assets, designer handbags and luxury cars. Banks in Singapore have responded by heightening scrutiny of foreign customers and intensifying efforts to identify sources of wealth, leading to delays in onboarding new customers.

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While some critics have suggested the episode highlighted lax controls in Singapore’s burgeoning family office sector, Marco Pagliara, head of emerging markets at Deutsche Bank’s private bank, attributes it more to growing pains that the local regulator responded to.

“There was a phase where there was a significant flow coming from north Asia — on the back of that there was correction that needed to be implemented. They did it quite swiftly,” says Pagliara. “Singapore is focused on running a very tight and organised ship with the way they manage their financial centre.”

This month, the Singaporean government published a package of recommendations to tighten anti-money-laundering rules in the city state, including improving information sharing between departments and giving prosecutors stronger powers. “We continually engage the industry and stakeholders to ensure that our framework remains robust against illegitimate wealth and welcoming of legitimate businesses and investors,” said the Monetary Authority of Singapore, the country’s financial regulator.


Though their home market has been losing ground, Switzerland’s wealth managers are seeking to capitalise on the growth in Asia by building on the cachet associated with being a Swiss bank. “Swissness stands for high quality, trust and credibility,” says UBS’s Khan, who recently relocated to Hong Kong to run the bank’s Asia-Pacific business. “But that’s not enough in today’s world. You need to have cultural heritage as well.”

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Khan, who will split his time between Hong Kong and Singapore, had previously been the sole head of UBS’s wealth management business and was based in Zurich. But he is one of several senior executives at European wealth managers who have relocated to Asia as they target the region for growth. Asia’s biggest banks were mostly late to prioritise developing their own wealth management businesses and trail far behind their longer established competitors from Europe and the US. But they are starting to catch up.

The Swiss banks have recognised that although their country’s reputation as the world’s centre for wealth management has taken a hit in recent years, they can still dominate in rival financial hubs. 

This article is part of FT Wealth, a section providing in-depth coverage of philanthropy, entrepreneurs, family offices, as well as alternative and impact investment

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There are no easy answers to the decline of UK’s Aim

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GM171013_24X Decline of small UK companies WEB

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London’s junior stock market is in a dire state, no matter how you look at it. The number of companies listed on Aim is barely over 700, its lowest level in more than 20 years. In fact, the broader universe of small quoted companies is ailing. Take the universe of UK-listed companies valued at under £1bn, whether on the main market or Aim: their numbers are down by a third in the past 20 years.

There has been much soul-searching about the UK equity markets generally. But these small-cap difficulties have this week alone inspired a duo of think-tank reports. One, by capital markets think-tank New Financial, warns of an “almost existential threat”. The problem is there are no magic bullets that will reverse Aim’s decline.

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Of course, the junior exchange’s problems cannot be disconnected from those of the wider London market, including the shift by UK pension funds to global equities allocation models, weak liquidity and structural valuation gaps compared with US peers (although the latter point has been contested by UBS among others).

GM171013_24X Decline of small UK companies WEB

The effect, though, has a disproportionate impact on smaller companies, argues New Financial’s managing director William Wright. Small companies that have delisted from Aim or are choosing to float elsewhere also complain about the lack of analyst coverage in the UK compared with other markets. Mid-size Aim groups have on average a quarter of the analysts covering them than US rivals, think-tanks the Tony Blair Institute and Onward have found.

Wider changes, such as the Financial Conduct Authority’s listing reforms, may help but will be something of a slow burn. Other measures could help: asset manager Abrdn has backed a call for the Mansion House Compact to be expanded to include all listed small caps. This voluntary agreement, signed last year by nine pension funds, aims for at least 5 per cent of members’ default funds to be invested in “unlisted” assets. This definition, however, already included Aim stocks. Amid calls to scrap stamp duty on share purchases, Aim again is already exempt.

Many proposals aimed at reviving the market involve tax breaks. Given UK chancellor Rachel Reeves has to close a £40bn funding gap, this is fanciful. The most optimistic outcome from the Budget would be no change to current tax reliefs.

The blunt assessment, from one of this week’s reports, was that Aim should simply be put out of its misery and scrapped. Unless policymakers and investors focus on ways to revive it, that is where the conversation will surely head.

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nathalie.thomas@ft.com

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Common detail missing from 20p coin which makes it 300 times MORE valuable

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Common detail missing from 20p coin which makes it 300 times MORE valuable

A COIN expert has given insight into a rare detail on a 20p coin which makes it 300 times more valuable.

The professional, who goes by the name of the CoinCollectingWizard on TikTok, shared how an error on a 20p coin made in 2008 has made it one of the “holy grails” for collectors.

The rare coin is worth over 300 times its value

1

The rare coin is worth over 300 times its valueCredit: TIKTOK

Almost two decades ago a number of 20p coins were struck with the wrong dye, resulting in no date on the coin.

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The social media star said this was due to a mix-up at the Royal Mint when the new Royal Shield of Arms design was introduced.

It was the first time in 300 years that it had been produced without a date.

“This makes it highly sought after by coin collectors,” the coin-collecting professional said.

It is thought around 250,000 coins have the error.

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The front of the coin features the traditional profile of Queen Elizabeth II.

Meanwhile, the back of the 20p features a segment of the Royal Shield.

Neither side of the coin features a date making it a rare find.

This coin is known as the undated 20p coin and can sell for up to £75 on places such as eBay.

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The 20p Coin you should check for

It’s also still in circulation meaning you have a chance of receiving one in your change if you pay for something in a shop.

But that has not stopped coin collectors from paying a hefty sum to get their hands on one.

The Sun found a 20p mule coin that was sold for £75 this week on eBay.

Another seller paid £51 for the coin at the start of October.

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However, it is important to note that a coin is only worth how much the buyer is willing to pay for it.

Other rare coins which could be worth more include the One Penny which dates back to 1893, but it’s the production error which makes it a valuable find. 

The ancient coin features Britannia on the back and the reverse of the coin is the usual Queen Victoria bun head, which is a feature on many coins from this era. 

What makes the coin valuable is an error with the number three in the date at the bottom of the coin. 

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How to spot valuable items

COMMENTS by Consumer Editor, Alice Grahns:

It’s easy to check if items in your attic are valuable.

As a first step, go on eBay to check what other similar pieces, if not the same, have sold for recently.

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Simply search for your item, filter by “sold listings” and toggle by the highest value.

This will give you an idea of how much others are willing to pay for it.

The method can be used for everything ranging from rare coins and notes to stamps, old toys, books and vinyl records – just to mention a few examples. 

For coins, online tools from change experts like Coin Hunter are also helpful to see how much it could be worth.

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Plus, you can refer to Change Checker’s latest scarcity index update to see which coins are topping the charts. 

For especially valuable items, you may want to enlist the help of experts or auction houses. 

Do your research first though and be aware of any fees for evaluating your stuff.

As a rule of thumb, rarity and condition are key factors in determining the value of any item. 

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You’re never guaranteed to make a mint, however.

Under the number three of the error coin, it looks like there is the start of a number two.

If the coin features this it could be worth up to £600.

How to spot rare coins and banknotes

Rare coins and notes hiding down the back of your sofa could sell for hundreds of pounds.

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If you are lucky enough to find a rare £10 note you might be able to sell it for multiple times its face value.

You can spot rare notes by keeping an eye out for the serial numbers.

These numbers can be found on the side with the Monarch’s face, just under the value £10 in the corner of the note.

Also if you have a serial number on your note that is quite quirky you could cash in thousands.

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For example, one seller bagged £3,600 after spotting a specific serial number relating to the year Jane Austen was born on one of their notes.

You can check if your notes are worth anything on eBay, just tick “completed and sold items” and filter by the highest value.

It will give you an idea of what people are willing to pay for some notes.

But do bear in mind that yours is only worth what someone else is willing to pay for it.

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This is also the case for coins, you can determine how rare your coin is by looking a the latest scarcity index.

The next step is to take a look at what has been recently sold on eBay.

Experts from Change Checker recommend looking at “sold listings” to be sure that the coin has sold for the specified amount rather than just been listed.

People can list things for any price they like, but it doesn’t mean it will sell for that amount.

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We explain further how you can find out if you have a rare coin worth thousands sitting around the house.

How to spot a fake coin

The Royal Mint has revealed how you can spot a fake coin and here are some possible signs to look out for. 

  • The date and design on the reverse do not match. 
  • The lettering on the edge of the coin doesn’t match the year.
  • The milled edge is poorly defined.
  • The lettering is uneven in depth, spacing or missing letters – or if the face designs are not as sharp or well-defined.
  • The coin appears shiny and doesn’t show signs of ageing. 
  • The coin’s colour is different compared to genuine coins.
  • Finally, check the alignment of the front and reverse designs.

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Self-powered suppliers and China’s start-up slowdown

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Column chart of PC shipments (mn units) showing Global PC industry shows little recovery after 2 years of slump

Hello everyone! This is Lauly from Taipei. It’s been a while since the last time I hosted the weekly #techAsia. I took annual leave and took my toddler, who had just begun to walk, to Okinawa, Japan. Travelling abroad with a one-year-old is never easy, but it was only a one-hour flight, and seeing him smile at the schools of colourful fish and large whale shark at the Okinawa Churaumi Aquarium, and clapping his hands when he had a bit of tofu at a downtown izakaya made it all worthwhile.

One very interesting thing I noticed while in Okinawa was that wherever we went, we could hear people speaking Taiwanese. It seemed like 80 per cent of the tourists at the aquarium were Taiwanese, and the hotel where we stayed was full of other Taiwanese families.

It all reminded me of my interview with Chiao Yu-heng, chairman of Passive System Alliance, a leading Taiwanese electronics component maker. Chiao, who speaks fluent Japanese, spent years studying and working in Japan in his youth and has recently initiated many investments in the country to forge closer collaboration between Taiwanese and Japanese tech suppliers. “I really like Japan and there are many aspects where Japanese and Taiwanese companies complement each other,” he said.

Apart from taking a holiday, I also recently wrapped up a deep-dive with my colleague Annie Cheng Ting-Fang into Asia’s shortage of renewable energy. The theme keeps cropping up in interviews and at events. Leading Nvidia AI server maker Foxconn said at its annual tech day that it is building a superpower computing centre in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung, which will require newly designed buildings, new layouts of water pipelines and additional electricity supplies. Most striking of all, I learned that operating a rack of AI servers uses roughly as much electricity as 300 households.

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Statistics like this are why the tech supply chain, from semiconductor and component makers to system integrators, are working to make AI computing more energy-efficient. The supply of energy, especially low-carbon emission energy, is going to be a key challenge for the global tech supply chain.

Going green

Delta Electronics is planning to build its own renewable power plants in India and Thailand, as the power and thermal management solutions provider steps up efforts to decarbonise its supply chain, Jesse Chou, Delta’s vice-president and chief sustainability officer, told Nikkei Asia’s Lauly Li and Cheng Ting-Fang in an interview.

Delta, a key power and thermal management system supplier for Nvidia’s GB200 server system, has identified that Thailand and India are the most challenging places for it to access sufficient renewable electricity.

“We can’t always rely on local governments to solve the issue,” Chou said. “We plan to build our own renewable energy plants to take a more active role to achieve our ultimate goal.”

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Delta joined the RE100 initiative in 2021, making it one of the earliest companies in the tech supply chain to do so.

Delta’s move comes as its home market of Taiwan looks to raise its emissions-cutting target for 2030 as the island looks to secure its position in the global supply chain, according to this exclusive interview by Thompson ChauLauly Li and Cheng Ting-Fang with Environment Minister Peng Chi-ming. The current goal is to cut emissions 24 per cent, plus or minus 1 per cent, by 2030, compared to 2005, which is not ambitious enough, according to Peng.

“We hope to accelerate our net zero goal in Taiwan,” he said.

Popularity pay-off

Xiaohongshu, China’s answer to Instagram, is growing in popularity. The start-up’s revenues surged to $1bn in the first quarter of this year as it ramped up advertising on the platform.

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The Shanghai-based unicorn turned profitable in 2023, a trend it continued in the first three months of the year as it generated $200mn in net profit, writes the Financial Times’ Eleanor Olcott. This is up from $40mn in the same period last year on revenues of about $600mn.

The country’s fastest-growing social media platform is beloved by city-dwelling young women, who flock to Xiaohongshu for restaurant, beauty and travel recommendations.

The start-up is a rare recent success story in a tech sector hit by bankruptcies and falling valuations and is one of a small group of promising tech unicorns that investors are eyeing for a potential initial public offering.

Column chart of PC shipments (mn units) showing Global PC industry shows little recovery after 2 years of slump

Top US computer maker HP is sharply scaling back the procurement decision-making power of its Taiwan team and increasing related positions in Singapore, as part of a major supply chain restructuring to mitigate geopolitical uncertainties, according to this scoop by Nikkei Asia’s Cheng Ting-Fang and Lauly Li.

The company has transferred responsibility for procurement and sourcing decisions to US-based executive Jonathan Jennings, who was newly hired this year and reports to HP’s chief supply chain officer, Ernest Nicolas. Taiwan, home to important suppliers in the laptop and desktop computer supply chains, has been a critical market for PC development and component procurement.

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Tensions between Taipei and Beijing have led some tech companies to set up production or operational hubs in third countries, particularly in south-east Asia. US-China tech tension is also driving the supply chain shift.

HP’s move comes as the global PC industry has been in inventory correction mode since the second half of 2022, when demand from the work- and study-from-home boom ebbed. Worldwide shipments plunged nearly 14 per cent in 2023.

Start-up slowdown

China’s fervour for entrepreneurship is fading as Beijing shifts its strategic focus to semiconductors, autos and other more job-heavy industries, writes Nikkei Asia’s Wataru Suzuki.

Venture capital and private equity investment in China fell 38.7 per cent on the year in the first half of 2024, to Rmb196.7bn ($28bn), according to research company Zero2IPO. Money raised by fund managers also dropped 22.6 per cent to Rmb622.9bn. By comparison, venture capital and private equity investment in the US fell 3 per cent to $418.5bn during the same period, while fund managers raised 3.3 per cent more.

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Local governments, another key source of funding, are increasingly backing companies that build factories, such as robot and drone makers, and companies in the semiconductor supply chain, rather than start-ups that often keep investors waiting for returns.

Ripples from the slowdown are spreading to businesses like the Shenzhen innovation centre and to Beijing’s Zhongguancun district, once known as the “centre of the universe” for its proximity to top universities, where empty cafés testify to the chill in networking and start-up hustle.

Suggested reads

  1. China cyber security body calls for Intel review over security (Nikkei Asia)

  2. Elon Musk battles Indian billionaires over satellite internet spectrum (FT)

  3. Thailand to move up semiconductor value chain with first front-end fab (Nikkei Asia)

  4. Rapidus’s Japan chip plant may bring $120bn economic windfall, but doubts remain (Nikkei Asia)

  5. Head of Saudi tech institute pledges to limit China AI collaboration (FT)

  6. Chinese carmakers deny intent to ‘overthrow’ western rivals (FT)

  7. AMD, Intel team up as semiconductor stocks slump on ASML outlook (Nikkei Asia)

  8. ‘800lb gorilla’: luxury brands battle China’s hit grey-market app (FT)

  9. Huawei trifold phone’s resale frenzy cools shortly after launch (Nikkei Asia)

  10. $1bn US battery plant plan shows race to reduce reliance on China (FT)

#techAsia is co-ordinated by Nikkei Asia’s Katherine Creel in Tokyo, with assistance from the FT tech desk in London. 

Sign up here at Nikkei Asia to receive #techAsia each week. The editorial team can be reached at techasia@nex.nikkei.co.jp

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AJ Bell platform business grows as customer numbers rise by 14%

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AJ Bell platform business grows as customer numbers rise by 14%

AJ Bell’s platform business has continued to grow, with customer numbers increasing by 66,000 to 542,000.

This represents an increase of 14% in the past year.

Its year-end trading update, published today (17 October), shows the total number of advised platform customers has increased by 12,000 to 171,000.

Meanwhile, the total number of D2C platform customers rose by 54,000 to 371,000, up 17% compared to last year.

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Platform assets under administration (AUA) rose to a record £86.5bn, an increase of 22% from 2023.

Gross and net inflows across the platform were significantly higher than previous years too, which AJ Bell said was driven by improved retail investor confidence.

Gross inflows hit £13.1bn, up 41% versus 2023 (£9.3bn), while net inflows hit £6.1bn, up 45% compared to the previous year (£4.2bn)

However, despite storing performance across its platform business, AJ Bell saw net inflows into its investment business fall by £100m.

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In both the advised and D2C markets, it recorded net inflows of £1.5bn, compared to £1.6bn the previous year.

Assets under management (AUM) in its investment business reached a record £6.8bn, up 45% from last year’s total of £4.7bn.

AJ Bell chief executive officer, Michael Summersgill, said: “I am pleased to report on another excellent year in which we have delivered impressive growth in customers and assets under administration.

“Our strategy is centered on our dual-channel platform which serves both the advised and D2C platform markets using a single technology platform and single operating model.

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“This maximises our growth opportunity within the platform market, whilst being highly efficient to operate.

“Platform net inflows of over £6bn demonstrates the benefit of serving both markets, while our efficient model drives strong profitability, enabling continual reinvestment in the business to support our long-term growth ambitions.”

Summersgill believes AJ Bell’s performance is down to enhancing its propositions, improving brand awareness and lowering the cost of investing for customers.

He also said the firm had seen “a noticeable change” in both customer contributions to pensions and tax-free cash withdrawals.

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While these behavioural changes do not have a material impact on AJ Bell’s business performance, Summersgill said they represent significant decisions for individual customers.

“We have therefore made representations to the Treasury calling for a commitment to a pension tax lock in the Budget, guaranteeing stability in key pension tax legislation for at least this parliament.”

Summersgill said that while the upcoming Budget has introduced “unhelpful uncertainty”, he “remains positive about the outlook for AJ Bell and the platform market more broadly.”

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Israel accused of implementing ‘starvation plan’ in Gaza

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Rights groups say Israel appears to be implementing a controversial plan to force Hamas into submission by laying siege to the north of Gaza. BHP’s chief executive met government officials in South Africa last week, fuelling speculation that the miner will resurrect its failed bid for rival Anglo American. Plus, the downfall of once-hyped genetic testing company 23andMe, and Prada launches in to spacesuit design.

Mentioned in this podcast:

More than 100 killed in Nigeria fuel tanker explosion

Israel ‘starting to implement’ north Gaza starvation plan, say rights groups

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BHP chief sparks fresh Anglo bid speculation after South Africa trip

Founder Anne Wojcicki races to rescue 23andMe

Prada launches into spacesuit design

The FT News Briefing is produced by Niamh Rowe, Fiona Symon, Sonja Hutson, Kasia Broussalian and Marc Filippino. Additional help from Breen Turner, Sam Giovinco, Peter Barber, Michael Lello, David da Silva and Gavin Kallmann. Our engineer is Joseph Salcedo. Topher Forhecz is the FT’s executive producer. The FT’s global head of audio is Cheryl Brumley. The show’s theme song is by Metaphor Music.

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Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com

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Marketing overwhelm? Here’s how I stripped mine back to basics

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Sam-Sloma-Sketch
Sam-Sloma-Sketch
Sam Sloma – Illustration by Dan Murrell

I have recently been spending a lot of time thinking about my business and what’s next for us.

We’ve had a really good few years, from a growth perspective. We’ve integrated one acquisition and we’re looking at one or two others. We are in an objectively good shape.

However, as the firm grows and more advisers join the team, we need to find a way to continue to build and for the business to be able to sustain itself.

When we set up, it was mainly my own connections and relationships that generated new clients. But that’s probably not enough now. The old adage of, ‘What got us here won’t get us there,’ feels apt.

We must do what fits for us. And why shouldn’t it be something we enjoy doing?

And so to marketing.

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It feels as if there are a million and one resources, from a financial services marketing perspective.

From podcasts by industry experts, marketing specialists, SEO companies and consultants galore, to other advisers promoting what they do on LinkedIn and/or X (formerly Twitter), it’s a minefield when determining who to follow and which options are best.

I have thought a lot about which approaches to explore and from whom to take inspiration. So many good people are providing really excellent, free content.

However, I chose to come away from all of that ‘stuff’. I went back to basics. I started thinking about my business, my life, what I wanted to do and how I wanted to do it.

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We decided to go to our best introducers and best clients and ask them what they, their peers, their colleagues and their friends might be interested in

Why? Well, while no doubt good, all the information out there is pretty generic. There can be basic guides for what can work or what has worked for other people, sure. However, these aren’t specific to me, to my business and to what I want to do with my time.

Actual people

So, I went back to thinking about what had brought people to my company and what had made them stay. Also, what I enjoyed in terms of marketing and what I didn’t.

As business owners, we get to choose these things. I don’t want to be ruled by the business — I want to rule it. This led me to AP — actual people.

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Forget AI; AP is where it’s at. I like people. I like speaking with them, learning their stories, hearing what challenges they have and thinking through the options to overcome them.

What is working already? What feels comfortable to you? What can you do often and sustainably

I realised, if we’re a business that people join and stay with because of the human connection, why don’t we do things that encourage more human connections?

We decided to go to our best introducers and best clients and ask them what they, their peers, their colleagues and their friends might be interested in.

These people are already advocates of ours. They get it, they get us.

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I understand why writing social-media posts or creating a podcast (I had one of those) and other digital content is useful for marketing. However, those things aren’t what define us.

I don’t like the peer pressure about what you need to do, marketing-wise. We must do what fits for us. Yes, we’d like it to work but why shouldn’t it be something we enjoy doing? Something authentic and sustainable.

We will monitor the results — who came in as clients and what work came from it. That’s the analytics we can review.

Gauging feedback

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Our marketing to-do list was relatively long to start with but we decided to refine it to three or four projects initially and gauge feedback from there.

None of these are revolutionary, either. Sorry if you thought I was going to give you the key to loads of new business.

We’re starting with a wine-tasting evening local to a number of our clients with a local wine-production company we know.

We’re doing an evening at a high-end watch retailer with a number of sports and entrepreneur clients with a big interest in watches.

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I started thinking about my business, my life, what I wanted to do and how I wanted to do it

We have seminars arranged, reviewing pensions and inheritance tax planning.

And we’re planning an event with our charity partner, Spread a Smile, to show our clients what we do as a business for them.

We will ask introducers to bring potential clients and we will ask clients to bring like-minded individuals.

I will update on how this has gone over the next year or so, but the main point of this column was to remind other business owners and advisers to think through what their marketing looks like.

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What is working already? What feels comfortable to you? What can you do often and sustainably, and enjoy rather than endure? Good luck.

Sam Sloma is managing director of Engage Financial Services


This article featured in the October 2024 edition of Money Marketing

If you would like to subscribe to the monthly magazine, please click here.

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