Dimitri Kallianiotis

Technology Investment Specialist

Geneva, Switzerland

English, French, Greek

Dimitri Kallianiotis joined the Advisory Services team at UBP in Geneva in early 2021 as a Technology Investment Specialist and managing a related investment certificate.

Before joining UBP, he worked in London for 14 years on the sell side at Citi and Redburn, where he specialized in telecommunications, and more recently at Atlantic Equities where he covered the US software sector.

Dimitri graduated from the EDHEC business school in France and holds a Postgraduate Diploma in Finance and Accounting from the London School of Economics.

Explore more from Dimitri

24.02.2025

DeepSeek: Chinese challenger enters the AI race

A new player has shaken the AI industry. DeepSeek, until recently a little-known Chinese start-up has launched DeepSeek-R1, a low-cost AI model challenging OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which is a stark reminder that the US is no longer the only competitor in the global AI race.

03.12.2024

The rise of AI agents

After a post-pandemic slump, the software sector is rebounding, with the rise of AI agents poised to drive adoption of generative AI and accelerate revenue growth.

28.02.2024

Generative AI: just getting started

Despite still being in its infancy, generative AI has already proved to be a boon for big tech names, but can it be used more widely, and if so, how and by whom?

19.04.2023

Generative AI: Revolutionising Business Innovation and Productivity

Generative AI is set to disrupt numerous industries by enhancing creativity, efficiency, and productivity…all sooner than you think.

25.01.2022

AI and blockchain: A match made in the Metaverse

The Metaverse represents a new evolution of the internet based on 3D interoperable virtual worlds. Artificial intelligence and blockchain will play a major role in powering digital avatars and allowing users to monetise their content.

10.02.2021

Big Tech: assessing the threats on the horizon

Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Alphabet/Google (‘Big Tech’) make up nearly 20% of the entire US market capitalisation by now. As a result, clouds may gather on the horizon for Big Tech in the shape of anti-trust prosecutions, increased regulation, and the prospect of adverse tax policies.