Rothschild Difference With Madoff Becomes Geneva's Obsession By Warren Giles May 8 (Bloomberg) -- There's more than 250 years separating Baron Benjamin de Rothschild from Bernard L. Madoff. This isn't an insignificant issue in Geneva where at least eight banks had about 10 billion Swiss francs ($8.8 billion) with Madoff, who pleaded guilty in March to masterminding a $65 billion Ponzi scheme. Investors are preparing lawsuits against firms that gave their cash to the New York con man. Five Aurelia Finance SA fund managers, who invested with Madoff, were charged last month by a Geneva magistrate for mismanaging client assets. "Madoff has become a filter for everyone's perception of whether banks were doing their job," said Leslie Gaines-Ross, chief reputation strategist at the Weber Shandwick consulting firm in New York and author of "Corporate Reputation: 12 Steps to Safeguarding and Recovering Reputation," (John Wiley & Sons Inc., 2008). "Rothschild is one of the few that is still admired and holds true to its reputation." Baron Benjamin, head of the Geneva arm of the Rothschild family that financed the Suez Canal and Wellington's victory at Waterloo, is betting that heritage will help his firm grow. Rothschild had no investments with Madoff. Rothschild and Madoff are "poles apart," said Cedric Tille, a professor at the Graduate Institute in Geneva and a former economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. "Many private banks in Geneva have enough tradition to sell themselves as cool heads who don't fall for the latest fad." 'Look for Safety' Banque Privee Edmond de Rothschild Group received 1.7 billion francs of new assets in the first quarter. Pictet & Cie. and Mirabaud & Cie., two Geneva-based banks that trace their roots back to the 19th century, also attracted clients after avoiding Madoff, who's in a Manhattan jail awaiting sentencing on charges that carry a maximum prison term of 150 years. Officials at Pictet and Mirabaud declined to disclose first-quarter inflows. Pictet, founded a decade before Napoleon's final defeat in 1815, attracted 17 billion francs of assets last year, three times more than Rothschild. Geneva's 140 banks and 700 independent wealth managers employ more than 34,000 people and have about 10 percent of the world's private assets held outside investors' home countries. Rothschild depends on its record of preserving customers' savings to set itself apart, said Werner Rutsch, co-author of "Swiss Banking -- Where Next?" (Neue Zuercher Zeitung, 2008). "In difficult times, people look for safety and personalities," Rutsch said. Relative Returns Unlike Geneva-based Union Bancaire Privee and Notz, Stucki & Cie., Rothschild avoided Madoff because "we couldn't get the visibility we wanted," said Claude Messulam, who has led the unit on a day-to-day basis since 1994, referring to the lack of information that was available on Madoff's investment process. Madoff reported annual returns of 8.5 percent to 11.7 percent during the past five years, according to Notz Stucki. Rothschild's $746 million Prifund Alpha Uncorrelated dollar fund rose at an annual rate of 5.9 percent in the same period. Funds that invest in other firms' hedge funds gained 3.47 percent, data compiled by Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc. show. Rothschild's conservative approach means the firm has a "window of opportunity" that may last another 12 to 18 months before markets pick up, said Teodoro Cocca, professor of wealth management at Johannes Kepler University in Linz, Austria. "There are times, like now, when Rothschild and wealth preservation will be more trendy," Cocca said. "But there will come a time when investors swing back to the greater risk- taking" of Zurich-based banks such as UBS AG and Credit Suisse Group AG, he said. Hiring in Latin America Investors pulled 226 billion francs from UBS last year as it posted a record net loss of almost 21 billion francs. UBS oversaw 1.6 trillion francs for clients at the end of the first quarter, 19 times more than Rothschild's assets, and Credit Suisse managed 667 billion francs, company reports show. The Rothschild private bank in Geneva, founded in 1953 and controlled by the sixth generation since Mayer Amschel Rothschild and his five sons bankrolled European governments in the 19th century, is optimistic about further inflows. "I see no reason why that shouldn't continue," Messulam said at offices hung with 19th-century oil paintings in the heart of Geneva's private banking quarter. The company has "benefited from the fears of certain clients at the big banks." Rothschild is hiring wealth managers in Geneva, Latin America and Asia to sustain the gains, Messulam said. Most Expensive Stock Rothschild, 83 percent-owned by Baron Benjamin and his family, has Europe's most expensive stock. The shares have climbed 38 percent to 26,300 francs in Zurich trading since falling to a four-year low on March 9, giving the firm a market value of 2.37 billion francs. The 29- member Swiss Financial Services Index advanced 51 percent in the same period. UBS is valued at 47 billion francs. Baron Benjamin, 45, is France's 19th-richest citizen with a net worth of 2.9 billion euros ($3.9 billion), according to Challenges magazine. He's also the wealthiest living Rothschild. "In the same way as the Rockefellers or J.P. Morgan, these are well-known people who stood for something which is still valid today," said Rutsch, the co-author of "Swiss Banking." Rothschild's assets under management fell 18 percent last year to 82.3 billion francs, compared with an average 23 percent decline for the 10 biggest private banks with headquarters in Geneva, data compiled by Bloomberg show. By comparison, Zurich- based EFG International AG's assets dropped 22 percent to 77.2 billion francs and those of Basel-based Bank Sarasin & Cie. declined 16 percent to 69.7 billion francs. 'Dazzling Pyrotechnics' Madoff told clients before his Dec. 11 arrest that their accounts were worth about $65 billion, prosecutors said. "We are outdone at times by the markets' dazzling pyrotechnics, but knowing that these invariably fizzle out we aim instead to deliver solid returns that will stand the test of time," Baron Benjamin wrote in a statement posted on the bank's Web site. "The value of wealth may depend at least as much on its age as on its magnitude." While Rothschild snubbed Madoff, he has mirrored his forebears with investments in Bordeaux vineyards, Brie de Meaux cheese and a slice of the French Alpine resort of Megeve. The promotion of what the bank calls its "art de vivre" reinforces the values and family history that are part of Rothschild's marketing strategy, Cocca said. Rothschild produces wine at four properties in France's Medoc region, close to the Lafite and Mouton Bordeaux vineyards owned by the French branch of the family, and in partnership with South Africa's Rupert family on a Huguenot farm 50 miles from Cape Town. A bottle of Baron Edmond 2003 from the Rupert & Rothschild vineyard costs 49 francs on Geneva's Rue du Rhone. The record price at auction for a bottle of 1787 Chateau Lafite, once thought to be owned by Thomas Jefferson, was $156,000. "We're the only bank with our own wine and cheese cellars, so whatever happens in the financial crisis, we have some margin," Messulam said April 2, drawing laughter from journalists enjoying a three-course lunch served on plates marked with the family's five-arrowed motif. To contact the reporter on this story: Warren Giles in Geneva at wgiles@bloomberg.net Last Updated: May 7, 2009 18:01 EDT |
News, Research and Opinion articles on World Current Affairs, Money & Finance, Natural Resources, Latin America, the Middle East, as well as other Miscellanea from the web.
Monday, May 11, 2009
Rothschild Difference With Madoff Becomes Geneva’s Obsession
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Tags, Categories
news
United States
Venezuela
Finance
Money
Latin America
Oil
Current Affairs
Middle East
Commodities
Capitalism
Chavez
International Relations
Israel
Gold
Economics
NT
Democracy
China
Politics
Credit
Hedge Funds
Banks
Europe
Metals
Asia
Palestinians
Miscellaneous
Stocks
Dollar
Mining
Corruption
ForEx
obama
Iran
UK
Terrorism
Africa
Demographics
UN
Government
Living
Russia
Bailout
Military
Debt
Tech
Islam
Switzerland
Philosophy
Judaica
Science
Housing
PDVSA
Revolution
USA
War
petroleo
Scams
articles
Fed
Education
France
Canada
Security
Travel
central_banks
OPEC
Castro
Colombia
Nuclear
freedom
EU
Energy
Mining Stocks
Diplomacy
bonds
India
drugs
Anti-Semitism
Arabs
populism
Brazil
Saudi Arabia
Environment
Irak
Syria
elections
Art
Cuba
Food
Goldman Sachs
Afghanistan
Anti-Israel
Hamas
Lebanon
Silver
Trade
copper
Egypt
Hizbollah
Madoff
Ponzi
Warren Buffett
press
Aviation
BP
Euro
FARC
Gaza
Honduras
Japan
Music
SEC
Smuggling
Turkey
humor
socialism
trading
Che Guevara
Freddie Mac
Geneve
IMF
Spain
currencies
violence
wikileaks
Agriculture
Bolívar
ETF
Restaurants
Satire
communism
computers
derivatives
Al-Qaida
Bubble
FT
Greece
Libya
Mexico
NY
PIIGS
Peru
Republicans
Sarkozy
Space
Sports
stratfor
BRIC
CITGO
DRC
Flotilla
Germany
Globovision
Google
Health
Inflation
Law
Muslim Brotherhood
Nazis
Pensions
Uranium
cnbc
crime
cyberattack
fannieMae
pakistan
Apollo 11
Autos
BBC
Bernanke
CIA
Chile
Climate change
Congo
Democrats
EIA
Haiti
Holocaust
IFTTT
ISIS
Jordan
Labor
M+A
New York
OAS
Philanthropy
Shell
South Africa
Tufts
UN Watch
Ukraine
bitly
carbon
earthquake
facebook
racism
twitter
Atom
BHP
Beijing
Business
CERN
CVG
CapitalMarkets
Congress
Curaçao
ECB
EPA
ETA
Ecuador
Entebbe
Florida
Gulf oil spill
Harvard
Hezbollah
Human Rights
ICC
Kenya
L'Oréal
Large Hadron Collider
MasterBlog
MasterFeeds
Morocco
Mugabe
Nobel
Panama
Paulson
Putin
RIO
SWF
Shiites
Stats
Sunnis
Sweden
TARP
Tunisia
UNHRC
Uganda
VC
Water
Yen
apple
berksire hathaway
blogs
bush
elderly
hft
iPad
journalism
mavi marmara
nationalization
psycology
sex
spy
taxes
yuan
ALCASA
ANC
Airbus
Amazon
Argentina
Ariel Sharon
Australia
Batista
Bettencourt
Big Bang
Big Mac
Bill Gates
Bin Laden
Blackstone
Blogger
Boeing
COMEX
Capriles
Charlie Hebdo
Clinton
Cocoa
DSK
Desalination
Durban
EADS
Ecopetrol
Elkann
Entrepreneur
FIAT
FTSE
Fannie
Freddie
Funds
GE
Hayek
Helicopters
Higgs Boson
Hitler
Huntsman
Ice Cream
Intel
Izarra
KKR
Keynes
Khodorskovsky
Krugman
LBO
LSE
Lex
Mac
Malawi
Maps
MasterCharts
MasterLiving
MasterMetals
MasterTech
Microsoft
Miliband
Monarchy
Moon
Mossad
NYSE
Namibia
Nestle
OWS
OccupyWallStreet
Oligarchs
Oman
PPP
Pemex
Perry
Philippines
Post Office
Private Equity
Property
QE
Rio de Janeiro
Rwanda
Sephardim
Shimon Peres
Stuxnet
TMX
Tennis
UAV
UNESCO
VALE
Volcker
WTC
WWII
Wimbledon
World Bank
World Cup
ZIRP
Zapatero
airlines
babies
citibank
culture
ethics
foreclosures
happiness
history
iPhone
infrastructure
internet
jobs
kissinger
lahde
laptops
lawyers
leadership
lithium
markets
miami
microfinance
pharmaceuticals
real estate
religion
startup
stock exchanges
strippers
subprime
taliban
temasek
ubs
universities
weddimg
zerohedge
No comments:
Post a Comment
Commented on The MasterBlog