JAR CAPITAL: TRANSPARENCY, STRUCTURING AND A MORE FORWARD- LOOKING MODEL OF INDEPENDENT ADVICE
As the independent wealth management landscape continues to evolve, firms are increasingly being judged on two fronts at once: whether they can respond to a more demanding and informed client base, and whether they have the operating infrastructure to do so efficiently. For Tim Walter, Chief Executive Officer, and Karol Bonati, Chief Investment Officer, of JAR Wealth Management Pte. Ltd., which operates in Singapore as part of the JAR Capital group, that means serving clients who want greater transparency, more involvement and a clearer understanding of how value is created across both portfolios and structures.
Walter argues that one of the biggest changes has been in client behaviour itself. Ten or fifteen years ago, particularly in Asia, access to a major private bank or family office often carried its own prestige. Today, that is no longer enough. Clients want to understand what they own, how it is being managed, what it costs and why particular strategies are being used. Bonati sees the same shift from an investment perspective, with clients asking more pointed questions about fees, net outcomes and whether a portfolio is actually delivering something distinctive after costs.
Clients Want More Transparency and More Involvement
Walter says the first clear trend is that clients now want much greater visibility and participation. He captures the shift directly: “Now the conversation very much goes into what type of product you invest in. Is it active funds? Is it ETFs? Is it futures? We really want to have access to all of the costs and if we can minimize those costs.”
That marks a real change from the old model, where many families were comfortable signing a discretionary mandate, attending periodic reviews and leaving the rest to the institution. Walter suggests that the spread of fintechs, social media and easily available market commentary has made clients much more confident in asking detailed questions. The relationship, as a result, has become more interactive and more exacting.
Even under discretionary mandates, Walter says the frequency of reviews and discussions has increased. In advisory relationships, the involvement is deeper still, with more debate around rebalancing, implementation and the logic behind particular ideas. In practice, that means independent advisers need to do more than manage money well. They also need to explain decisions clearly, defend them persuasively and show where value is actually being added.
The Conversation Is Broader – from Costs to Structuring
That growing sophistication is not limited to portfolios alone. Walter points to structuring as an increasingly important theme, especially around the Variable Capital Company regime in Singapore. He presents this not as a narrow legal or administrative development, but as part of a wider shift in how families organise capital, pool assets and think about long-term wealth planning. As he explains, “We see a lot of families, group of investors looking into that, either to pool capital, because now wealth is becoming more open, people talk about their assets and the way to invest a bit more, so there’s a lot more pooling across families, across asset managers, and also better wealth planning consideration, and the VCC is a tool that can offer that More broadly, this
structuring capability has helped us diversify our client base beyond the traditional high-net-worth and ultra- high-net-worth segment to include institutional and corporate investors. That is less typical among traditional External Asset Managers, and we believe it should ultimately make our business model more resilient.”
“We’ve got a dedicated and experienced team that allows us to put together fund structures for defined groups of investors, dedicated families or specialised strategies in a very efficient and bespoke manner.”
From the investment side, Bonati says clients are also becoming more discerning in how they evaluate active management. A central question now is no longer just whether a portfolio has performed well, but whether it has delivered meaningful value after all fees and costs have been taken into account. That, in his view, is a healthy development because it shifts the discussion away from headline returns and towards the real usefulness of active management in different parts of the market.
Rather than making broad claims about outperformance, Bonati’s point is more nuanced. In highly efficient markets, especially large and heavily researched ones such as U.S. equities, generating persistent excess returns after fees is far more difficult than many investors assume. That realism appears to shape the firm’s approach. The emphasis is less on claiming that alpha can always be found, and more on being selective about where active management can genuinely justify its cost.
Bonati also notes that investors are looking more carefully at alternative strategies that are genuinely differentiated from traditional risk assets. In his view, many strategies described as diversifiers still retain substantial market exposure, which weakens their value when clients most need resilience. That is why he points to areas such as receivables funds, distressed funds and
private credit as parts of the market now attracting more serious interest from clients who see them as potential sources of stronger and more credible diversification.
A Crowded Industry, but Real Differences in Execution
Walter is careful not to overstate the firm’s uniqueness in what he openly describes as a crowded and service-based industry. Even so, he identifies several areas where JAR Capital believes it has a genuine edge.
The first is the group’s international footprint. With offices in Monaco, Geneva, Dubai and Singapore, and further international expansion at an advanced stage, the firm can support clients whose needs cut across regions. Walter’s point is practical rather than cosmetic. It is about having expertise on the ground, whether that means assisting an Asian client with property in Switzerland or helping a European family invest into Asia. As he puts it, “In all of these offices we’ve got our investment team, we’ve got our team of experts on the ground, so our connectivity I think is a real strength. In addition, there is a strong sense of collaboration among the various locations. Each office brings its own strengths, which are made available across the wider firm through carefully implemented service-level agreements.”
The second differentiator is the way the investment team is organised. Walter notes that the Singapore office sits within a broader investment committee spanning the group’s different offices. That means clients are not simply getting a regional view, but a more global one. In his telling, this allows the firm to bring clients strategies and perspectives from different parts of the world,
rather than limiting the discussion to an Asia-only lens.
The third is structural capability. Since receiving its Singapore licence in 2022, JAR Capital has built out a fund operations and structuring platform that includes dedicated operational, compliance and structuring support. That matters because it allows the firm not only to advise on portfolios, but also to create structures for families or investor groups in a way that is faster
and more tailored than many traditional setups can offer. Walter describes that advantage clearly: “We’ve got a dedicated and experienced team that allows us to put together fund structures for defined groups of investors, dedicated families or specialised strategies in a very efficient and bespoke manner.”
That structural capability also feeds into competitiveness. Walter argues that combining wealth management and fund management allows the firm to be quicker to market and stronger on pricing, while also opening the door to co-investment opportunities and access to managers that private banks may not always make readily available.
Research on the Ground, Not Just in Reports
Bonati highlights a different set of strengths from the investment side. One is the extent of direct field research. He notes that he and Walter travel frequently across China, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia and Australia because there is a real difference between reading research and understanding what is actually happening locally. The idea is not simply to consume market narratives,
but to test them against reality on the ground.
That matters because much of the firm’s work appears to be based on challenging consensus rather than merely repeating it. Instead of relying entirely on analyst reports, the team tries to build conviction through direct observation and then bring those observations into conversations with clients.
Bonati also points to the benefit of being connected to a private buy-side network of roughly 400 hedge fund managers. In his view, that reduces the risk of market groupthink and helps the firm avoid getting swept up in fashionable themes too easily. He describes the firm’s posture in straightforward terms: “It’s very easy to lose capital and difficult to actually earn it.” That mindset naturally leads to a stronger focus on downside risk, behavioural finance and geopolitical analysis.
AI as Part of the Investment Process
Bonati says that as soon as the technology became genuinely usable, JAR Capital built it into its portfolio construction and econometric work. The important point here is that the firm is not speaking about AI mainly as an operational productivity tool. Instead, it is treating it as part of the investment process itself.
He explains that the firm combines traditional research tools with a quantitative and AI overlay, not to replace human judgement, but to sharpen it. More importantly, he describes the practical use in a way that feels grounded rather than fashionable. The process is explicitly forward- looking. Starting from assumptions about inflation, yields, currencies, geopolitics or specific conflicts, the team asks how a portfolio should be positioned and where the market may be mispricing assets.
Bonati summarises the core question very effectively: “Based on this, what are the currently mispriced assets? What are the underpriced assets? Or is there a behavioural finance element that is coming into play?” That is where AI appears to be adding real value – not through generic automation, but by helping the team translate macro views into a more systematic portfolio posture.
Bonati emphasises that these tools support, rather than replace, investment judgement; final decisions remain subject to human oversight, risk assessment, liquidity analysis, suitability considerations and portfolio context.
For JAR, the point is not simply to use AI, but to use it in a controlled, responsible and explainable way.
There is also a more practical technology layer beneath that. Bonati notes that the firm has its own CRM and aggregation system, allowing assets held across several custodian banks to be brought together under one umbrella. That directly supports the client demand for more transparent reporting and a more consolidated view of wealth.
The Next 12 to 18 Months
Walter says the next phase for JAR Capital is about building on the foundations created by the Lyra Capital acquisition. Much of the recent period has been spent on post-merger integration across IT, accounting, HR and team structure. He makes clear that this has involved more than administrative consolidation. It has meant working through overlapping roles, identifying capability gaps and reshaping the combined business without reducing headcount.
That process is now largely complete. Walter describes the current position in clear terms: “We are now in a place where that restructuring is 95% done and we can really move forward with a high-performing team, having the right people in the right places.” From there, the focus shifts to growth. One priority is hiring relationship managers in Singapore, something JAR had not previously pursued in an active way, having previously built much of the team organically and, more recently, through the integration of Lyra Capital.
The other is remaining open to further M&A opportunities. Walter says the Lyra acquisition was opportunistic rather than long-planned, but it has also brought visibility and highlighted how much consolidation interest exists in Singapore’s independent wealth market, even if much of it remains below the surface. In that sense, the transaction has not only strengthened the platform internally. It has also positioned JAR Capital as a more visible and active participant in a segment where further consolidation may yet emerge.
Taken together, Walter and Bonati describe a market that is becoming more transparent, more analytical and more structurally sophisticated. Clients want clearer explanations, better cost visibility, more credible alternatives and smarter structuring. JAR Capital’s response appears to rest on a combination of cross- border reach, local structuring and fund capability, direct research on the ground and an investment process that is becoming increasingly scenario-driven and AI-enhanced. In a market moving away from prestige and towards substance, that feels aligned with where independent advice is heading.
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