Two large global wealth managers have imposed restrictions on staff travel to China after a UBS Group AG employee was detained, underlining the challenges of capturing business in a nation where fortunes are growing the fastest on the planet.
UBS has asked some bankers not to travel to China after the incident, said people with knowledge of the matter, who asked not to be identified because the measures were not public.
Julius Baer also imposed a travel ban for its relationship managers to the country, another person said.
Chinese government clampdowns and unexplained absences have unsettled executives plying their trade in China, where even the head of law enforcement agency Interpol is not immune from abrupt detention.
Interpol president Meng Hongwei (孟宏偉) was reported missing this month after being taken into custody upon his arrival from France.
“China is deep into an anti-corruption drive as well as effort to deleverage the economy,” said Scott Kennedy, a China expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
“The government are focusing like a laser beam on the financial sector,” he said.
It was unclear under what circumstances the Singapore-based UBS employee was detained and whether the person has been released, the people said.
The UBS restrictions have only affected those who help manage money for clients and have not been imposed on the securities unit, the people said.
A spokesman for UBS, the world’s largest wealth manager, declined to comment on the ban and detention.
Julius Baer also declined to comment.
A Credit Suisse spokesman said no travel ban was in place for its staff.
Other banks with operations in China contacted by Bloomberg, including JPMorgan Chase & Co, had no immediate comment.
China is a huge growth area for firms such as UBS as the share of world’s wealthy people surge in the region.
UBS estimates a new billionaire is minted in China every two days and Credit Suisse this week said China’s total wealth has risen 1,300 percent this century to US$51.9 trillion, more than double the rate of any other nation.
Even amid the crackdown, China has thrown open its financial markets to foreign firms, a move that has given global companies unprecedented access to the world’s second-biggest economy. Over the past year, the nation has announced reforms that relax foreign ownership limits for lenders, insurers and money managers.
UBS has a long history in China and claims to have been the first Swiss-based bank to establish a presence in the Asia Pacific region in 1964.
The Swiss lender is in talks to acquire a majority stake in its Chinese securities joint venture.
It is also the largest wealth manager in Asia, with total assets under management of US$383 billion at the end of last year, according to Asian Private Banker.
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