Home Featured Deutsche Bank’s private bank eyes hiring push in emerging markets

Deutsche Bank’s private bank eyes hiring push in emerging markets

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Deutsche ​Bank plans to add Relationship Managers in its emerging markets private banking unit this year, said a senior executive, as the European ‌lender seeks to bolster its wealth footprint in the Gulf region and North Asia.

Marco Pagliara, Head of Emerging Markets at Deutsche Bank Private Bank, ​told Reuters that "selective hiring" would also continue in 2027 and 2028, without giving specific targets or disclosing the number of relationship managers it has by ​region.

The ​hiring spree is part of the private bank's aim to grow its emerging markets front office headcount by 50% over the next three years.

CAPTURING GROWING GLOBAL WEALTH

The move comes as global banks have been ramping up their private banking offerings in recent years, especially in the fast-growing regions of Asia and the Middle East, to tap into the expanding population of millionaires and billionaires.

Global financial wealth reached an all-time high of $305 trillion in 2024, according to Boston Consulting Group's Global Wealth ​Report 2025.

Diversification, including where ‌investors hold assets ⁠and how they allocate capital, ⁠has been a growing theme among the bank's wealthy clients, Pagliara said, amid rising global market volatility.

For instance, clients who previously held assets ​in Singapore or Hong Kong are now more likely to use other wealth centres as well, like ‌Switzerland, Luxembourg and the UK, he said, as allocations to Europe-domiciled investments increase.

Switzerland ⁠will be another focus of the private bank's headcount expansion, Pagliara added.

The trend is in line with a push from money managers to invest in a broader range of asset classes across markets, particularly away from the United States, as geopolitical ructions and unpredictable policymaking weigh on sentiment.

"This diversification not only reflects (ultra-high-net-worth) family aspirations for global assets like real estate, it also reflects the clients' desire to diversify assets geographically to mitigate geopolitical risk," Pagliara said.

GROWING APPETITE FOR LEVERAGE

Lombard lending - where private banking clients borrow against the value of their investment portfolios - is another area where the private bank is aiming to double down amid growing interest.

"Right now, I'm seeing more clients using the dry powder they've got," Frankfurt-headquartered Deutsche Bank Private Bank's global head of ‌wealth management and business lending, Adam Russ, said in a separate interview.

"It's not a ⁠case of clients aggressively leveraging, but they are just taking leverage up a tick."

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