Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC) Expanding In Asia

In the banking industry, the market potential for Asia remains as hot a topic as ever. While the major  US based banks have sought to expand and grow market share, hoping to gain a piece of IPO action and potentially  billions of depositors, most ventures have been met with limited success. Wells  Fargo (NYSE: WFC) hopes to be an exception to that.

The economic contraction under way in the Pacific Rim has forced many companies to rethink their model, and change their deployment of resources. Last week, the Minneapolis based Piper Jaffray Cos. Announced that it  would sell or shut down its Hong Kong office.  The high cost of doing business and difficult regulatory framework to navigate  through makes it difficult for Western financial service firms to succeed in the  expanding Asia Market. Wells Fargo & Co., the San  Francisco based banking giant announced plans to increase its  workforce in Asia by at least 10 percent in the next three years, a move that  will add hundreds of employees in places like Hong  Kong, Singapore  and Tokyo as  other financial companies cut back there.

The expansion plans of Wells  Fargo are a stark contrast to its competitors currently. A recent Bloomberg  Businessweek report noted that Royal Bank of Scotland is shutting units in Singapore and Korea, adding to  the net job losses locally in the financial service  industry.

Wells Fargo has been making  bold moves since it’s Wachovia acquisition in 2008. The bank that once seemed  content with it’s dominance of banking in the western part of the  United  States, now appears to have much more grand  aspirations. Through its east cost expansion by rebranding Wachovia, and  headcount additions in Asia, the future of Wells Fargo may look remarkably  distant from its regional past.