Advertisement

DBS posts 300% surge in semi-liquid fund sales in Greater China amid demand for yields

Chinese private-banking clients have shifted away from equity-focused investments and increased their exposure to the US and Europe, according to DBS

Reading Time:1 minute
Why you can trust SCMP
DBS automated teller machines in Singapore. Photo: Reuters

DBS Group, Southeast Asia’s biggest banking group, saw sales of its semi-liquid fund products to Greater China spike this year and expects demand to remain high as investors boost allocation for alternative assets.

Advertisement

The year-to-date sales of semi-liquid funds to Greater China investors surged 300 per cent from a year ago, Carol Wu, DBS head of private banking in North Asia, said in an interview. The products – some targeting double-digit returns with risks laid out to investors – are managed by asset managers including Apollo Global Management, KKR and Brookfield Asset Management, the lender said.

Semi-liquid funds are underpinned partially by private assets but offer more frequent redemption opportunities than close-ended funds. It allows DBS to sell professional investors products that were previously exclusive to institutional investors.

While designed to match business capital demands with long-term funding, semi-liquid funds can be forced to sell underlying assets if they face concentrated redemptions requests. Such risks were highlighted by the surge in client withdrawals for Blackstone’s real estate fund about two years ago.

The majority of DBS’s private bank clients who invest in private equity products, prefer to buy semi-liquid products that they can access on a quarterly basis, Wu said.

Advertisement

Private wealth is fuelling the growth of semi-liquid funds, which reached a record US$350 billion in assets globally at end-2023, according to data provider Preqin.

Advertisement