By Marius Zaharia and Anshuman Daga
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - DBS Group Holdings Ltd (SI:DBSM) expects to expand its wealth management operations as Asia's wealth grows, accounting for as much as 20 percent of the bank's total income over the next few years, Piyush Gupta, the CEO of Southeast Asia's largest bank by assets, said.
"Our (wealth management) business has doubled in the last 5 or 6 years and is close to 15 percent of DBS's top line income. Our ambition in the next few years is to get it to 20 pct of the bank," said Gupta, ahead of a Reuters Newsmaker in Singapore on Thursday.
Under Gupta, 57, who took over the reins in 2009, DBS has more than doubled its profits, broken into the ranks of top five private banks in Asia Pacific and turned around its underperforming Hong Kong unit.
DBS and the private banking arm of rival Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (SI:OCBC) are jostling for market share in a highly competitive wealth management business in Asia, led by global players such as UBS (S:UBSG) and Citigroup (N:C).
DBS has diversified its business franchise to focus more on transactional banking and wealth management but the bank still earned about 70 percent to 80 percent of its profits from Singapore in recent years, highlighting its dependency on its home market.
Gupta said he does not believe acquisitions "at scale" are the way to go for DBS, but the bank will continue to consider bolt-ons to expand its presence overseas.
Income from DBS' wealth management unit jumped 19 percent to S$1.7 billion ($1.2 billion) in 2016. State investor Temasek Holdings (TEM.UL) owns a nearly 30 percent stake in DBS.
($1 = 1.4109 Singapore dollars)