Monday, November 5, 2018
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
Private banking and wealth management – an introduction
1.
Wealth management/financial planning services may be provided to
·
HNWIs
·
Individuals/families
of more modest needs (that is, less than USD 1 million in investable assets)
·
ultra-HNWIs (who has at least USD 30 million in
investable assets)
- Wealth managers often align themselves with
·
Broader
teams inside wealth management firms
·
An
external network of supporting experts
·
Banks
(private or otherwise)
- Different forms of banking
·
Retail
banking (savings and transactional accounts, mortgages, term
loans, debit and credit cards)
·
Premium/premier
banking (customers with USD 100,000 to USD 1 million investable
assets)
·
Private
banking (Customers with more than USD
1 million investable assets)
- Key types of private bank and wealth management firms:
- A private bank's main sources of income and revenue are:
·
Transaction fees and commission
·
Interest income
·
Trading income (when the bank buys/sells assets on
behalf of client)
- Fee models applied by banks
·
Transaction
fee model (charged when the client engage the bank for a
product or service)
·
Advisory
fee model (charged based on the advises)
·
Hybrid
fee model (a combination of above)
- Challenges faced by banks
·
Risk
and compliance requirements imposed by national and international regulators
·
Tax
transparency and reporting
·
Higher
client expectations
·
Outdated
client service models
·
Requirement
for digital services (e.g. – mobile phones)
·
Competition
from market players
FOREX Deals
1.
The currency market, or forex (FX), is
the largest investment market in the world.
2.
Currency is traded in various sized lots.
3.
The micro lot is 1,000 units of a currency, a mini lot
is 10,000 units and a standard lot
is 100,000 units.
4. All
currency trading is done in pairs.
5.
A pip or
percentage in point, is the smallest increment of trade. E.g. – If EUR/USD pair
goes from 1.1234 to 1.1235, that is a one pip change (an increase/decrease by
0.0001)
6.
The eight currencies most often traded are
·
U.S. dollar (USD)
·
Canadian dollar (CAD)
·
Euro (EUR)
·
British pound (GBP)
·
Swiss franc (CHF)
·
New Zealand dollar (NZD)
·
Australian dollar (AUD)
·
Japanese yen (JPY)
7.
When you trade in the foreign exchange spot
market (where trading happens immediately or on the spot), you
are actually buying and selling two underlying currencies. All currencies are
quoted in pairs, because each currency is valued in relation to another. For
example, if the EUR/USD pair is quoted as 1.2200 that means it takes $1.22 to
purchase one euro.
8.
Every currency in the world comes attached with an
interest rate set by the central bank of that currency's country.
9.
You are obligated to pay the interest on the currency
that you have sold, but you also have the privilege of earning interest on the
currency that you have bought.
10. The
currency
pair is a key idea among the rudiments of Forex trading. Example -
EUR/USD = Base currency/Quoted currency = Buying EUROS and selling USD
EUR/USD = 1.1234/1.1240 = Bid Price/Ask
Price
11. Spread
= ask price - bid price
12. Two
types of spreads
a.
Fixed
b.
Floating
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