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Wealth Management in Brazil 2009
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Datamonitor |
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2009³â 08¿ù |
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98778 |
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44 pages |
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Abstract
Introduction
Brazil has never been an easy market for international wealth managers, and in
the last 12 months it has become even tougher. Private banks need to
appreciate the challenges that this market presents and understand where the
strategic opportunities lie. This report provides this information, drawing on
research and interviews and incorporating data from Datamonitor' s Global
Wealth Model.
Scope of this research
- Sizes, segments and forecasts the number of affluent invididuals across 10
liquid asset bands from USD50k
- Primary research among domestic wealth managers provides insight into HNWs
and the private banking market
- Utilizes Datamonitor' s proprietary Wealth Management Opportunity Index to
score the attractiveness of the market
Research and analysis highlights
Brazilians are very exposed to their domestic stock market because of their
large equity and mutual fund holdings. In the years leading up to 2008, this
positioning served them well, but last year crashing markets caused a dramatic
contraction in the number of affluents in the country, reducing them by 55%.
In the wake of the market' s falls, there was a rise in demand for more
defensive products among Brazil' s high net worths (HNWs), but at heart they
remain risk loving individuals who favor fairly simple asset allocations. The
country' s HNWs are becoming more demanding of their wealth management service.
For international players, the onshore wealth management market in Brazil is
difficult to penetrate and hard to compete in. Success requires a
well-developed proposition, real points of differentiation and an intelligent
plan for client acquisition. Service quality and excellent client information
are two points of possible differentiation.
Key reasons to purchase this research
- Understand Brazilian HNWs' attitudes and investment behaviour, and reasons
for choosing/leaving their wealth service.
- Gain insight into the competitive characteristics of the Brazil wealth
management market, and learn the factors for success.
- See how the Brazil wealth management market scores against Datamonitor' s
Opportunity Index.
Table of Contents
OVERVIEW
- Catalyst
- Summary
- Methodology
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
- 2008 was a very painful year for Brazil' s investors, although the good
times will resume from 2009 onwards
- HNWs are still risk loving, but they are becoming more sophisticated and
demanding
- The wealth management market in Brazil is well-developed and competitive
- International wealth managers need to treat this market cautiously and
think hard about their differentiators
BRAZIL' S WEALTH
- Brazil' s economy proved resilient right up to 2009 and should return to
its high-growth ways in the coming years
- Brazil' s stock market was not as badly affected as other BRIC countries
in 2008, and has come back strongly in 2009
- Relatively high interest rates have bolstered Brazilians' wealth
- The importance of equity in Brazilians' portfolios has grown rapidly over
the past few years
- In 2007, Brazilian investors had more onshore liquid assets in equities
than in deposits
- 2008 marked a painful year of losses for Brazil' s wealthy, but 2009 will
put them well on the road to recovery
- The number of affluents in the country fell by 55% last year due to the
sharp fall in the financial markets
BRAZIL' S WEALTH MANAGEMENT MARKET
- It is becoming increasingly difficult for international wealth managers to
enter and succeed in Brazil' s wealth management market
- The Wealth Management Opportunity Index
- Wealth management market features
- Wealth management client characteristics
APPENDIX
- Datamonitor' s Wealth Management Opportunity Index
- There are five key parameters when assessing a market for its wealth
management potential
- There are 18 components to the five key parameters of the wealth
management opportunity index
- Definitions
- The drivers of growth in the wealthy population
- Income growth (combined with inflation, changes in GDP by sector,
household savings rates and debt levels)
- Investment returns (market capitalization, interest rates and bond
yields)
- The following measures are not, in themselves, drivers of wealthy
population growth
- Market capitalization
- GDP
- The following measures are not drivers of wealthy population growth except
under very restricted circumstances
- Primary residence value growth
- Inheritance
- Bibliography
- Further reading
- Ask the analyst
- Datamonitor consulting
- Disclaimer
TABLES
- Table: Financial assets of Brazilian retail investors
- Table: Value of onshore liquid assets in Brazil in dollar bands ($bn)
- Table: Forecast value of onshore liquid assets in Brazil in dollar bands
($bn)
- Table: Number of individuals in Brazil in dollar bands (000s)
- Table: Forecast number of individuals in Brazil in dollar bands (000s)
- Table: Wealth Management Opportunity Index - Brazil
- Table: Wealth Management Opportunity Index with values - Brazil
- Table: Global ranking of assets under management (October 2008)
- Table: Distribution by fund type (October 2008)
- Table: Types of assets managed by the largest asset managers in Brazil
- Table: Brazil' s banks by nature, ownership and size (March 2009)
FIGURES
- Figure: Growth in average nominal wages has occurred in a low inflationary
environment
- Figure: The stock markets of the BRIC countries have bounced back strongly
in 2009
- Figure: Interest rates have fallen sharply over the past few years, but do
offer good returns relative to inflation
- Figure: The 2008 fall in the stock market had serious consequences for the
wealth of Brazilians
- Figure: The relative proportion of equities held by Brazilian investors
ballooned in 2007 and popped in 2008
- Figure: Brazilians have embraced a number of different fund types
- Figure: The Brazilian Real has strengthened against the US dollar of late
- Figure: A number of factors point towards the likely movement of money
back onshore
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