<b>Size counts when tiny margins rule</b>
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<b>Size counts when tiny margins rule</b>

Headline: Size counts when tiny margins rule
Source: Euromoney
Date: November 2000
Author: Gill Baker

Tough competition, thin margins and the application of electronic technology are crucial themes in custody in Asia as in the rest of the world. With customers driving hard bargains on basic services, custodians are doing their best to persuade them of the benefits of a range of add-on services including performance and risk management tools. In the process, smaller local custodians are losing ground. Gill Baker reports

“Survival of the fittest - and the biggest” must surely be the mantra of the Asian custody business even more so than for the rest of the region’s banking industry. Custodians worldwide are battling with wafer-thin margins on their traditional safe-keeping and clearing and settlement business, but for Asian bankers there is the additional challenge of convincing ultra price-conscious regional clients of the benefits of value-added services.

“This is a volume business, and it is a system automation oriented business. Volume actually means a lot. Pricing is important, and if you are big, you will become even bigger,” says Darwin Doo, head of custody sales for Standard Chartered Bank. That said, custody volume growth in Asia is outpacing that of the rest of the world, but it still only represents a small portion of total global transactions.








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