Succinct Summation of Week’s Events 8.3.18
Succinct Summations for the week ending August 3rd, 2018
Positives:
1. Unemployment rate fell 0.1% in July from 4% to 3.9%.
2. ADP employment report shows 219k increase in July, beating the expected 173k.
3. Pending home sales rose 0.9% in June. meeting the high end ofexpectations .
4.Challenger job cut report shows layoffs decreasing form 37,202 to 27,122 m/o/m.
5. Personalincome rose 0.4% m/o/m as expected.
6. Same store sales rose 4.2% w/o/w, higher than the previous 3.8% rise.
Negatives:
1. Non-farm payrolls rose 157k m/o/m, down from June’s 213k rise and on the low end of expectations.
2. MBA homemortgage applications fell a seasonally adjusted 3% w/o/w, for third weekly decline in a row.
3. The trade deficit fell from -43.1B to -46.3B for month of June.
4. Jobless claims came in at 218k w/o/w, slighter higher than previous 217k.
5. Factory orders rose 0.7% m/o/m, missing the expected rise of 0.9%.
6. Construction spending fell 1.1% w/o/w, well below an expected increase of 0.3%.
Summer Camp for the Ultra-Wealthy Teaches
Kids How to Stay Rich
Attendees
at Next Gen functions hosted by the likes of UBS, Citi Private Bank, and Credit
Suisse will one day rank among the world’s most sought-after clients.
By
Suzanne Woolley
July
30, 2018, 4:00 AM EDT
Fifty-two heirs to lavish fortunes luxuriate in sleek splendor at
the Four Seasons.
They sip
designer lattes and speak the language of wealth. The talk is of money,
noblesse oblige, technology, Formula One. At lunchtime, out comes chilled rosé,
with a tasting led by Jon Bon Jovi’s son Jesse.
Welcome
to Camp Rich.
Here, not far from Wall Street, Swiss banking giant UBS Group AG has
convened its annual Young Successors Program (YSP), a three-day workshop for
people who were born loaded. Part tutorial and part self-actualization
exercise, the event is designed to stamp the UBS brand on the minds of the next
generation of the ultra-wealthy—in essence, to hook them
while they’re young.
With an average age of 27, attendees at the June YSP and other Next
Gen functions hosted by the likes of UBS, Citi Private Bank, Morgan Stanley and
Credit Suisse will one day rank among the world’s most sought-after clients.
Or, at least, that’s the hope. In an era of extreme affluence, elite money
managers are vying for the hyper-rich as never before. The
world is poised for a generational shift in wealth that will ripple through
global business and financial markets, and the banks can’t afford to take any
accounts—current or future—for granted.
On one
level, these programs—also held in cities such as Zurich, London and
Singapore—represent high-end networking opportunities where the young and
rich can be young and rich together.
The
intimacy “allows them to let their guard down for a change,” said John
Mathews, head of private-wealth management and ultra-high net worth for UBS
Wealth Management USA.
The
gatherings also allow private banks to show off the broad range of services
they offer, which is crucial as investing becomes largely
commodified—and in any case, isn't a topic that inspires passion among
millennials.
So while
one of Citi Private Bank’s Next Gen programs offers a day on financial theory
and strategy, it also devotes a day to entrepreneurship and innovation and
another to estate planning.
“We want
young ones to understand that, as a scion of a wealthy family with a business
legacy, you have responsibilities,” said the aptly named Money K., who heads up
Citi's global Next Gen programs from Singapore. “Eventually you will inherit,
so how should you think about it, and what are the rules on estate planning in
different jurisdictions around the world?''
Invitees
to the June UBS confab had at least one thing in common: a family account with
the bank well into—or above—the eight-digit mark. They arrived from around the
world and included seven sets of siblings. The youngest was 21; the oldest, 34.
UBS executives agreed to speak about the gathering, and allowed a reporter to
attend all but the evening activities, on the condition that participants not
be named.
Fusty these affairs are not. For one cocktail reception, UBS chose
a penthouse with a terrace atop the Beekman Hotel, a renovated Gilded Age
office building. Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.—about as old-school as it
gets, with a history going back to 1818—hosted 40 offspring of its best clients
at the chic Soho Grand last year. Morgan Stanley’s private-wealth management
business went for
a different hipster vibe, taking over the bowling lanes at Lucky Strike in
Manhattan for the 100 attendees of its Next Gen program in May.
Since
many millennials want to run their own businesses and like to learn from peers,
Morgan Stanley included a “Shark Tank”-style session with young social
entrepreneurs pitching to a panel of three attendees.
“Socially
responsible investing is a theme that really resonates,” said Mandell Crawley,
head of private wealth management at the bank.
Personal
branding also clicks with the younger generation, so Crawley headed up a
discussion on “Defining Your Narrative.” Breakout talks included creating “a
powerful package called ‘you’” and “how to communicate like a leader.”
Another
popular theme is innovations in philanthropy, and wealth managers are
increasingly keen to offer strategic advice. Checkbook charity doesn't appeal,
but impact philanthropy does, because the results can be measured. The poster
child for this may be Scott Harrison, 42, founder of Charity: Water, who spoke
at the Morgan Stanley event and UBS’s June gathering.
Harrison’s
story stretches from life as a nightclub promoter to head of a wildly popular
nonprofit creating access to clean water in developing countries. His
presentation showed photos of the grueling journeys many women and girls take
to fill jerry cans with 40 pounds of water that isn’t even fit to drink.
Millennials
are said to value experiences over things, so UBS had the group walk a mile
with a similar can, switching off among themselves as they headed to a chic
townhouse for cocktails. There, to get a different perspective, they donned
virtual-reality goggles. The next morning, UBS announced it had donated $12,000
in the YSP group’s name to build a well.
Jesse Bongiovi shared some thoughts during one of the lunches,
along with the rosé wine, Diving into Hampton Water, that he launched with
his Grammy-winning father. The 23-year-old got some inspiration on marketing
the rosé when he was an attendee at last year’s program, after hearing a
presentation on disruptive innovation from Luke Williams, a professor of
entrepreneurship and marketing at New York University Stern School of Business
and regular speaker at the UBS workshops. Fast cars—really fast ones—entered
the mix, too. Nico Rosberg, a 33-year-old Formula One
champion, spoke about his new focus on cutting-edge startup
investing. Silicon Valley technologist and venture capitalist Evangelos
Simoudis, of Synapse Partners, also spoke.
Networking
breaks punctuate the sessions, and the food can be as trendy as the venues. At
the UBS event, attendees could try out a La Colombe draft latte machine or grab
a fresh bottle of Voss water to wash down artfully arranged, freshly baked
mini-doughnuts and pretzels with cheese dipping sauce, or a healthier
concoction involving chia seeds, dried papaya bits and mint.
All the
informal mingling has led participants to become best friends, marry, vacation
together and invest alongside each other, the banks say. Bongiovi hooks up
regularly with five guys he met in the program, and UBS’s Mathews said one set
of alums dubbed themselves the “Group of 13” and convene every year to talk
about family issues.
The banks often set up LinkedIn groups or Facebook pages and host
events during the year, such as UBS gatherings at Art Basel in Miami Beach.
Credit Suisse may have the most elaborate networking program. Thirty-five sons and daughters of the bank’s most valued clients go through its six-day Young Investors Program (YIP) and so become part of its Young Investors Organization (another acronym: YIO). YIP alums head up the
group, which has more than 1,300 members from 55 countries and has regional,
local, and global meetings.
Credit Suisse may have the most elaborate networking program. Thirty-five sons and daughters of the bank’s most valued clients go through its six-day Young Investors Program (YIP) and so become part of its Young Investors Organization (another acronym: YIO). YIP alums
Sparking
communication between the heirs and their parents may yield the biggest
dividends for wealth managers, however.
“I went
home and asked my parents a million and one questions about how things are set
up,” Bongiovi said. He met the family’s adviser, and they’ve gotten together a
number of times since then. Bongiovi said he is now a lot more familiar and
involved with his family’s situation and their next steps.
And, of
course, he’s more familiar with UBS. Mission accomplished.
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