CNBC Transcript: Martin Gilbert, Chief Executive Officer, Standard Life Aberdeen

Below is the transcript of a CNBC Exclusive interview with Martin Gilbert, Chief Executive Officer, Standard Life Aberdeen. The interview was first broadcast on CNBC's Squawk Box Asia on 17 September 2018.

All references must be sourced to a "CNBC Interview'.

Interviewed by CNBC's Nancy Hungerford

Nancy Hungerford (Nancy): We are here on the eve of ten years since Lehman Brothers and as you were at Aberdeen, we're watching this all unfold stateside, but eventually what came to the U.K would eventually affected Aberdeen. How bad did it get? Did you ever take a step back, and say we could go in the way of Lehman?

Martin Gilbert (Martin): No, I don't think so. I think the asset management businesses are sort of different from insurance and banks. We don't have the risk on our own balance sheet. I knew we would suffer a profit hit but I knew we would we would survive. And we sort of knew it was coming because I always remember in June of that year speaking at a conference in Monaco and actually saying you know the big risk out are CDOs and they remind me so much of split capital investment trusts and the crash that we were sort of slightly prepared for it. But we learnt a lot from it about risk in our own business which we didn't actually think would be an issue i.e. where do you put your cash, and remember asset managers were sitting on billions of cash. We were worried where to put the cash every day. So we did learn a lot from the crisis.

Nancy: Many people here have said the risk environment is different. You've said yourself that there is a greater understanding of prudence in the business too. But does too much prudence carry its own risks as well, when you look at what shareholders demand in the way of returns?

Martin: Yeah, I think one of the things and if you speak to the governor of the bank of England or regulators around the world, they've shifted the risk from bank balance sheets to really onto the funds that asset managers manage. So they've now become gigantic and of course, that's where they see the risk coming but be under no illusion the regulators want the banks to be safe and almost utilities and so do the shareholders to a certain extent. All we want is a steady dividend stream. We don't want too much excitement. If we do want to excite we can go and buy Goldman Sachs for instance. But for the domestic banks like Lloyds, we want just nice safe well run banks.

Nancy: When you talk about the fact you did see some cracks emerging in the early days, before the financial crisis really took off, is there anything you see today that gives you cause for concern?