Harry Wu

Harry Wu

Directeur, Marchés non cotés

Harry est directeur au sein de l'équipe Marchés non cotés, spécialisé dans l'immobilier et les infrastructures. Harry a rejoint le cabinet en janvier 2019, après avoir passé plus de quatre ans en tant que consultant en investissement chez PwC. Harry est titulaire d'un MSc en finance et développement de l'Université de Londres, d'un diplôme de première classe en économie de l'École d'études orientales et africaines (SOAS) et est titulaire de la certification CFA.


Market intelligence:

bfinance’s quarterly report in May 2023: read the team’s latest insights on institutional investor activity, risk appetite, market developments and asset manager performance across all major asset...

Next month will mark five years since Velliv (formerly Nordea Liv and Pension, Denmark) left its parent company—the banking group Nordea—to forge a new identity as a member-owned pension provider....

The ‘impact’ private equity sector is rapidly growing and maturing. Yet it is far from straightforward to assess the credibility of these strategies. This report showcases the current fund universe...

bfinance’s quarterly report in February 2023: read the team’s latest insights on institutional investor activity, risk appetite, market developments and asset manager performance across all major...

Investors are considering whether to slow down their deployment to illiquid strategies or maintain their previous pace after a year of disappointing performance in bond and equity markets,...

BlackRock, Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan and Sequoia Capital are among the named investors of FTX — the Bahamas-based cryptocurrency exchange whose collapse has made headlines across the financial...

bfinance’s quarterly report in November 2022: read the team’s latest insights on institutional investor activity, risk appetite, market developments and asset manager performance across all major...

Investors have appeared satisfied, so far, with the resilience shown by their infrastructure portfolios through the turmoil of 2022. The combination of inflation sensitivity, low real interest rates...