By Abby Schultz

The day after the Swiss central bank removed the floor under the Swiss franc and sent the currency soaring against the Euro, UBS Wealth Management put out a note to its private bank clients detailing how the move would hurt Switzerland's growth and the stocks of Swiss companies dependent on revenues in other currencies.

"The next morning when I was here (in Asia) I was being asked for tactical trades and what people could buy around this," Simon Smiles, UBS's chief investment officer for ultra-high net worth investors, recalls with a laugh. And there were trades to recommend, like using currency options to make very short-term bets on the relationship between the Euro and the franc.

"It had the right kind of risk profile for clients wanting to be tactical and benefit from this, the return-to-risk was significant," says Smiles. The CIO was speaking in a meeting room at the bank's offices at the International Finance Centre in Hong Kong in-between back-to-back meetings during a visit to Asia from his home office in Switzerland.

Smiles offered up the episode to illustrate how many super-wealthy investors in Asia approach investing: more like gamblers than long-term investors. And it's not an isolated incident. "I can't remember the last time a Swiss client asked me what a stock is going to do in the next week," says Smiles. "That often happens in meetings here."

But, surprisingly, Smiles says the most well-to-do have many investing traits in common no matter where they live.

They have a collective bias toward investing in what's familiar - stocks and bonds from the region where you live -although specific types of investments may differ. Investors in Hong Kong have high allocations to Chinese and Hong Kong stocks, while Spanish investors buy government bonds and Swiss investors will buy a handful of Swiss equities along with bonds.

The ultra-wealthy also almost universally keep a large amount of their investments in cash. In Asia, the figure is 25%. One reason is that entrepreneurs, who make up a big percentage of the upper echelon of the rich, have a lot of money tied up in their businesses and they want to have the cash on hand as an offset. And a lot of clients don't view the capital markets as providing many good alternatives. If you missed out on the rallies that sent stocks soaring after the financial crisis, "behaviorally, it's hard to get invested after such great returns," Smiles says. Rates on government bonds, meanwhile, are low, and so cash doesn't seem like such as bad option.

Most super-wealthy also like to invest in property, although, again, their preferences vary depending on where they live. Asian investors will gain exposure to property through stocks and bonds sold by property companies as well as buying it directly, while investors elsewhere are more likely to invest directly.

But Asia does stand apart in a couple ways. There's the gambling nature of many customers, where you look for what you can buy in the next day or so to make a quick return, and the fact fewer of Asia's most affluent buy the idea of a diversified basket of investments. A typical ultra-high-net-worth portfolio in Asia might be 70% stocks and 30% property, Smiles says. A corollary to that is few of the super-wealthy delegate responsibility for their investments to an outside manager like UBS. They prefer to do it themselves.

UBS won't reveal specifics of how many of their ultra-wealthy clients give UBS discretion for managing their assets, in Asia or elsewhere, but Smiles says the "vast, vast" majority of discretionary assets the private bank manages are not in Asia, despite the high proportion of ultra-high-net-worth assets from the region. Industry-wide, only about 5% of private bank clients in Asia have these so-called discretionary accounts compared with 30% in Europe, according to 2013 figures from the Boston Consulting Group. At UBS, you need to invest US$50 million to receive ultra-high-net-worth services.

On the margins, investors are coming around, through lots of education and explaining about why a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds, hedge funds and the like, makes more sense. Sean Cochran, a UBS managing director in Hong Kong who advises clients on discretionary portfolios, told current and prospective UBS private bank clients at a meeting this week that portfolios they create on their own historically underperform UBS's diversified portfolios.

In the two-year period from October 2012 to September 2014, for instance, only 2% of UBS's customer-directed investments outperformed monthly composite data of classic UBS portfolios, while 7% had comparable performance and 18% underperformed. A huge 73% created portfolios that were outside of UBS's risk range, with levels of volatility that exceeded 10%, although many of these did outperform UBS's portfolios as well.

If you follow UBS's advice, you'll invest more in the U.S. growth story. That's a strong message throughout the bank's investor materials for both the long-term as well as this year. For now that means buying more U.S. stocks and high-yield bonds, as well as stocks in companies and economies across the globe that will benefit from U.S. strength.

UBS's private bank also likes stocks in the Eurozone and is less fond of most emerging markets, including Asia, which it expects will suffer from the U.S. dollar's growing strength as the U.S. Federal Reserve tightens monetary policy. That message will be a hard sell in Asia.

Smiles met with a customer with a family office in Hong Kong earlier this week, who wouldn't consider investing in Europe, for instance, given his expectation that the euro is going to weaken and the U.S. dollar will strengthen. A year ago, Smiles found most of his customers in the region thought Europe was on the verge of an upswing and since that didn't play out, they don't want to consider it now, even as UBS believes Eurozone stocks will benefit from a weaker currency, lower oil prices and record-low government bond yields.

"We do think over a six-month basis that the European economy will start to recover finally, it will start to grow again and that should be supportive of European equities," Smiles says.

While the bank in general prefers developed markets over emerging markets, Asia is seen as a "silver lining," but only in specific markets - namely Taiwan and India. UBS likes Taiwan for the exposure of its technology companies to the U.S. consumer and India for its potential to benefit from lower oil and food prices as well as reforms being enacted by pro-business Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The private bank is neutral on China within its global asset allocation recommendations as it expects only 6.8% GDP growth next year, and a continued drag to investment growth from the property sector. But these big-picture views are only part of the story in terms of what UBS recommends to its ultra-wealthy clients, many of which are looking for unconventional trade ideas that aren't correlated with the direction of markets.

For instance, while the bank's macro view is that Chinese renminbi will depreciate over the next year, some clients might want to take the opposite stance, and execute their idea through a series of option trades on the offshore renminbi. As Smiles says, "We've found clients who are interested in taking a contrarian view and having the outsized payment if they're right."

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