Julius Baer's boss is leaving the Swiss private bank to become a partner at Pictet. In an analysis, finews.asia draws the curtain back on the allure of Geneva's secretive giant for Boris Collardi.
In Zurich, Boris Collardi led an 11-man team overseeing 393 billion Swiss francs in client assets. In Geneva, Collardi will jointly be responsible for 210 billion francs for Pictet together with another bank partner, Remy Best.
A step down? Hardly. Pictet is the gold standard of Swiss banking: a 212-year-old brand which is run discreetly by partnership of at least six and not more than nine men (unlike rivals Lombard Odier or Mirabaud, Pictet has never had a female partner).
Collardi told staff at Julius Baer that he hoped to have more time for his personal life and family after giving up the CEO job and joining Pictet. The banker lives in tax-friendly canton Schwyz, but grew up in Nyon, a vineyard town between Geneva and Lausanne.
Riches and Prestige
But the move isn't simply shifting gears: the 43-year-old banker has to buy equity in Pictet, and will become one of seven partners. For Pictet, landing the ex-CEO is a coup, but equally, the private partnership offers riches and prestige far beyond what Julius Baer, Credit Suisse or UBS could ever offer.
«The partnership» decides unanimously in what it calls the «salon» setup, or not at all – meaning the pace of decision-making can be glacial. Partners buy equity in the firm when they join, which they can also inherit through family ties.
Because market value would be prohibitively expensive for a bank which had a profit of 422 million francs last year, stakes are bought and returned at book value – still in the tens or hundreds of millions of francs, depending on the size.
Banking Untouchables
Pictet has a lending facility to ease the one-time financial hit, and the loan is paid off over a period of many years when partners draw their profits. The mechanism is meant to foster the long-term thinking that Pictet says is the key to its success.
But Pictet doesn't enjoy talking about money, preferring to refer to intellectual or emotional qualities. «A new partner has to be someone you would be happy to sit down to a meal with,» ex-senior partner Jacques de Saussure told an academic journal.
If it sounds a world removed from the harsh realities of Paradeplatz, quarterly results and investors – it is. Pictet's partners are the financial equivalent of untouchables in Geneva banking circles, and answer to no one except themselves. Their tenure is usually more than 20 years, which is why new partners are chosen with the care normally devoted to picking a spouse.
Asia, U.S. Know-How
To be sure, Collardi offers far more to Pictet than pleasant dinner conversation: he is expected to use his stellar connections in Asia to kickstart Pictet's business in the region, which has been slow to grow. Fluent in French, German and Italian besides his long-time working language of English, Collardi is supremely well-connected and confident in the type of entrepreneur circles that Pictet would like to crack.
He also has extensive experience in settling regulatory snafus with U.S. authorities. Pictet, like Julius Baer, is still on the hook with U.S. prosecutors for helping wealthy Americans hide their money from tax. Julius Baer paid $547 million to settle the probe last year.
The U.S. fine is the type of setback that Collardi will, in future, have to shoulder as a co-owner and no longer as an employee. Doubtlessly, Pictet has stowed funds towards a settlement, and its capital stands at a healthy 2o.4 percent, more than twice the 7.8 percent Swiss requirement.
No More Hobnobbing
Collardi is the youngest Pictet partner, but not by much: Marc Pictet, an eighth generation family representation, and trading and sales head Bertrand Demole are just one year older than him.
The banker has grown accustomed to the limelight as well as hobnobbing in recent years. He has also taken a more active role in speaking for the Swiss-wide industry, which will have intensified his relationship to Pictet's partners.
But now he is likely to disappear from public view initially: one of Pictet's rigid traditions is that the partner with the most seniority – currently Nicolas Pictet – speaks for the partnership, and the rest are seen but rarely heard.