Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc’s next banking unit chief vowed to target business in Asia, while signalling the potential for cutbacks in developed markets as plunging interest rates dent profitability.
“In Asia, we will pursue growth,” Junichi Hanzawa, 55, told reporters on Thursday after being appointed president of MUFG Bank Ltd. “In Europe and the US, where interest rates are very low, we need to get leaner.”
Hanzawa will replace Kanetsugu Mike, 64, on April 1, the company said in a statement.
Japan’s biggest bank has been aggressively expanding in Asia, where it has spent about $15bn buying stakes in lenders in Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam and the Philippines. While MUFG will continue to seek growth in the region, Hanzawa stressed that it’s done with acquiring lenders there, reiterating recent remarks by chief executive officer Hironori Kamezawa.
As well as shrinking rates at home and abroad, Hanzawa inherits the task of digitising operations and curtailing bad-loan costs after the pandemic. 
The banking group is crafting a long-term strategy to be announced early in the fiscal year starting April.
MUFG has been suffering from low profitability at its domestic retail business, where keeping a costly branch network is becoming more difficult to justify. Under Kamezawa, 59, the lender is now on a drive to expand digital services and reach younger customers who are more inclined to do banking on their phones.
“In an ultra-low interest rate environment, our revenues are constantly declining and our cost structure is not matching that environment,” said Hanzawa, who is currently chief compliance officer.
An immediate challenge is dealing with the fallout from the coronavirus-hit economy. In November, MUFG raised its annual estimate for bad loan costs to ¥500bn ($4.8bn), citing the need to make more provisions for possible defaults. 
Massive government and central bank stimulus have helped to prop up businesses so far, but it remains uncertain how long the aid can sustain weak companies.
Hanzawa, who is also a managing executive officer, has long been seen as a candidate for the top job. His past titles include head of the corporate planning office, which serves as chief of staff for the CEO. He joined MUFG’s predecessor Mitsubishi Bank in 1988 after graduating from the University of Tokyo.
Mike will become chairman of the holding company, succeeding Nobuyuki Hirano, 69.