Compliance
SEBA Bank Secures Hong Kong Licence
![SEBA Bank Secures Hong Kong Licence](https://wealthbriefing.com/cms/images/app/Hong%20Kong/HongKongpanorama.jpg)
The Swiss bank has been building an international strategy, and now operates from the Middle East, Asia, and its home country.
SEBA Bank, the
Swiss bank that has recently
told this news service about its strategy for digital
assets, has secured a Hong Kong licence for its wholly owned
subsidiary.
SEBA Hong Kong won the licence from the Securities
and Futures Commission in Hong Kong, giving the bank its
first regulated footprint in Asia-Pacific.
Having been granted the licence, SEBA Hong Kong can now deal in
and distribute all securities, including virtual assets-related
products, such as over-the-counter derivatives and structured
products with underlying virtual assets, advise on
securities and virtual assets, and conduct asset management
for discretionary accounts in both traditional securities and
virtual assets.
Institutional and professional investors, including corporate
treasuries, funds, family offices and high net worth individuals,
can start to use SEBA Hong Kong’s licensed services
immediately.
“Hong Kong has been at the centre of the crypto economy since
bitcoin’s inception, and we are very pleased to have added this
Hong Kong licence with the full approval from the SFC to our
existing licences in Switzerland (FINMA) and Abu Dhabi (FSRA),”
Franz Bergmueller, group CEO, SEBA Bank, said. “This regulatory
clarity not only benefits our business but also supplements Hong
Kong’s status as a global financial services hub, home to a
multitude of market leaders in banking, asset management, and
capital markets.”
The firm operates from its regulated hubs in Switzerland,
Abu Dhabi and Hong Kong.
The intersection of wealth management, private banking and
digital assets continues to evolve. A 2021 Goldman
Sachs survey
found that nearly half the family offices it conducts business
with want to add digital currencies to their stable of
investments, with the closely held firms seeing crypto as a
possible hedge for higher inflation and prolonged low interest
rates. Almost half of respondents to that Goldman Sachs report
said that they were thinking of moving into digital assets such
as bitcoin, although most are not currently in this space. Their
main reason for caution is that they are sceptical about whether
cryptocurrencies are a store of value.
(Goldman Sachs polled more than 150 family offices.) Major
institutions, including JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Julius Baer,
Guggenheim Partners, and others, are involved. SC Ventures,
Standard Chartered’s innovation and ventures unit, partnered with
Northern Trust to launch Zodia, a cryptocurrency custodian for
institutional investors.