UBS seeks China digital bank licence as part of plan to turbocharge growth and slash costs

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Swiss bank UBS aims to create a digital banking platform that could slash costs and spur growth, but its plan hinges on securing a licence in mainland China to kick-start the project.

Edmund Koh, who heads UBS in the Asia-Pacific region, sees China's framework digital banking rules in place by June or July. At which point, he hopes that the lender's application for a nationwide, majority-owned digital bank licence will gain traction.

If UBS succeeds, it will join the likes of Tencent Holdings' and Alibaba Group Holding's banking affiliates in providing low-cost financial services online across China, where two new billionaires emerge every week.

"We need scale, and I'm going to get that scale for UBS, working together with the Chinese authorities," said Koh, who plans to incubate the platform in China, then take it global.

Edmund Koh, who heads UBS in the Asia-Pacific region. Photo: Handout alt=Edmund Koh, who heads UBS in the Asia-Pacific region. Photo: Handout

Koh estimated it costs roughly US$25,000 to acquire a wealth-management client, which UBS could slash down to as little as US$60 via a digital bank. He has a stretch goal in mind of expanding UBS's 30,000 customer base in Asia to 200,000 within two years, once he has secured the digital banking licence in mainland China.

China's regulators are now working on guidelines for a further batch of digital-banking applications from domestic and overseas firms present in China. The country's regulations for its rapidly evolving digitising financial markets are gradually coalescing. New rules are likely to be stricter than previous iterations, requiring higher reporting standards, capital requirements and clarified regulatory reporting lines. The cost of running a digital financial operation is likely to rise as a result, said industry sources.

China has granted 18 licences for privately run banks since 2014, including those to Tencent-backed WeBank, Alibaba's affiliate MYbank and aiBank, whose investors include Baidu. These are online-only banks and the new digital banking rules will govern them as well.

WeBank, one of China's internet banks, is backed by Tencent. Photo: SCMP alt=WeBank, one of China's internet banks, is backed by Tencent. Photo: SCMP

China has gradually been opening up to foreign financial institutions, which have ranged from asset managers to insurers. Other global wealth managers are expanding in China too, including BlackRock and French asset manager Amundi, but they plan to sell their products through the distribution networks of Chinese commercial banks.