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UBS AG

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UBS AG
Type Public (NYSEUBS; SWX:UBSN; TYO: 8657)
Founded 1998 merger of the Union Bank of Switzerland and the Swiss Bank Corporation
Headquarters Basel & Zürich, Switzerland
Key people Peter Kurer, Chairman
, Vice Chairman
Sergio Marchionne
Industry Finance
Products Financial services
Operating income 3,952 million CHF (1Q 2008) (about 3,838 million USD)
Net income 11,535 million CHF (1Q 2008) (about 11,203 million USD)
Employees 81,577 (as end of 2Q 2007)
Website UBS.com
The UBS Tower in Chicago (photo by Krzysztof Makara).

UBS AG (NYSEUBS; SWX: UBSN; TYO: 8657) is a diversified global financial services company, with its main headquarters in Basel & Zürich, Switzerland. It is the world's largest manager of private wealth assets, "the world's biggest manager of other people's money"[1] and is also the second-largest bank in Europe, by both market capitalisation and profitability. UBS has a major presence in the U.S., with its American headquarters located in New York City's Manhattan borough (Investment Banking); Weehawken, New Jersey (Private Wealth); and Stamford, Connecticut (Capital Markets). UBS's retail offices are located throughout the United States, and in over 50 other countries. UBS is an abbreviation, which originated from a predecessor firm, the Union Bank of Switzerland, however UBS ceased to be considered a representational abbreviation after its 1998 merger with Swiss Bank Corporation.[2]

UBS's global business groups are Private Banking, Investment Banking, and Asset Management. Additionally, UBS is one of the leading providers of retail banking and commercial banking services in Switzerland. Overall invested assets are 3.265 trillion Swiss francs (CHF), shareholders' equity is 47.850 billion CHF and market capitalization is 151.203 billion CHF by end of 2Q 2007.

The AG in the company's name means Aktiengesellschaft, which is the equivalent to a shareholder-based corporation in the USA.

In some ways, UBS has evolved on a similar path to its cross-town rival Credit Suisse. Both are Swiss commercial and retail banks which bought major US investment banks (and in the case of UBS, a leading retail stock broker, PaineWebber), and both are currently investigated by US authorities for helping US citizens to evade taxes. *[1]

In 2007, after incurring huge losses, UBS was forced to turn to the Government of Singapore for fresh funding. Since then, the largest shareholder of UBS is Government of Singapore Investment Corporation.[3] *[2]

In November 2008, following further dramatic losses, UBS managers pledged to return bonuses.*[3]. UBS shareholders voted to accept financial aid from the Swiss government, to restore the shaken trust into UBS.*[4].

Contents

[edit] History

UBS has its roots as a Swiss Bank, originating in 1747, when its first branch was established in the Swiss region of Val Poschiavo. However, the three core components of the company date back to the second half of the nineteenth century. Union Bank of Switzerland, Swiss Bank Corporation, and Paine Webber or their antecedents, were all founded in the 1860s and 1870s.

Modern UBS was formed through a merger of the Union Bank of Switzerland and the Swiss Bank Corporation in June 1998. Although the merged company's new name was originally supposed to be the "United Bank of Switzerland," officials opted to call it simply "UBS" because of a name clash with United Bank Switzerland - a part of the United Bank Limited's Swiss subsidiary.

SBC had previously built a global investment banking business through its acquisitions of Dillon Read in New York and S.G. Warburg in London. The first chairman of the merged bank had to step down in October 1998 due to the Long-Term Capital Management crisis, which affected the Union Bank of Switzerland. In 2000, UBS acquired PaineWebber Group Inc. to become the world's largest wealth management firm for private clients. Invested assets in all wealth management businesses, including the U.S., total CHF 3.265 trillion.

On June 9th, 2003, all UBS business groups rebranded under the UBS name as the company began operating as one large firm. UBS Paine Webber, UBS Warburg, UBS Asset Management, and others became simply "UBS". As a result of the rebranding, UBS took a $1B writedown for the loss of goodwill associated with the retirement of the Paine Webber brand. UBS is no longer an acronym but is the company's brand, like 3M. Its logo of three keys, carried over from SBC, stands for confidence, security, and discretion.[4]

UBS is present in all major financial centers worldwide, with offices in 50 countries. According to the UBS website, the bank had 81,557 employees on June 30, 2007. The 2007 Q2 report breaks these Financial Business permanent staff down by region as: 27,315 in Switzerland, 31,933 in the Americas, 13,355 in Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA / not including Switzerland), and 8,954 in Asia and Australasia (APAC).

[edit] Management

The Board of Directors is the most senior corporate body with ultimate responsibility for the strategy and the management of the company and for the appointment and supervision of its executive management.[5] Its members are:

The Group Executive Board is the executive body of the company.Its members are:

Chairman Marcel Ospel did not seek re-election on April 23, 2008 annual general assembly of shareholders and was succeeded by Peter Kurer, who was general counsel, the bank said, in a statement on April 1, 2008.[6]

[edit] Businesses

See also Swiss banking and Zurich

UBS is organized in four business groups: Global Wealth Management & Business Banking, Investment Bank, Global Asset Management, and Corporate Center.

[edit] UBS Polybahn

One of the more unusual businesses operated by UBS AG is the UBS Polybahn, a funicular railway in Zürich, Switzerland. The group's ownership of this line dates back to 1976, when the Union Bank of Switzerland rescued the then-failing funicular company.[5]

[edit] Competition

Main competitors are Deutsche Bank, Fortis, Citi, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, Banc of America Securities LLC, Goldman Sachs, Dresdner Kleinwort, Merrill Lynch and JP Morgan Chase.

[edit] Workplace

[edit] Diversity

UBS was named one of the 100 Best Companies for Working Mothers living in the U.S. in 2006 for the fourth consecutive year[7] by U.S. based Working Mothers magazine. It is a member of the Stonewall Diversity Champions scheme and has active Gay and Lesbian, ethnic minority, and women's networking groups. UBS was included on Business Week's The Best Places to Launch a Career 2008, and ranked #96 out of the 119 total companies listed. [6]

UBS North American headquarters building in Stamford, Connecticut: Trading floor is beneath bowed roof

[edit] Records

The UBS trading floor in Stamford, Connecticut holds the Guinness World Record as the largest securities trading floor in the world. The 103,000-square-foot (9,600 m2) operation has 40-foot (12 m) arched ceiling freeing it of columns or walls. The size of three football fields, it is home to 1,400 traders and staff who handle about $1 trillion worth of transactions a day. It is roughly 227 feet (69 m) wide by 410 feet (120 m) long. UBS officials have boasted that a Boeing 747 jet could turn around in it.[citation needed]

UBS building in Midtown Manhattan.

[edit] Financials

In full-year 2006, UBS reported net profit attributable to UBS shareholders (“attributable profit”) of CHF 11,253 million, with CHF 11,249 million from continuing operations and CHF 4 million from discontinued operations.

For the year ended December 31, 2006

For the year ended December 31, 2007

Swiss bank UBS AG told April 1, 2008 it expected to post net losses of 12 billion Swiss francs (US$12.1 billion) for the first quarter of 2008 and would seek 15 billion Swiss francs (US$15.1 billion) in new capital. UBS, hard hit by the U.S. Subprime mortgage crisis, also said it sees losses and writedowns of approximately US$19 billion on U.S. real estate and related credit positions.[7] In April 2008 UBS's long term credit ratings were cut to AA- by Fitch Ratings and Standard & Poor's, and Aa1 by Moody's.

On October 16 2008, UBS announced they had CHF 6 billion of new capital through mandatory convertible notes, fully placed with Swiss Confederation.The SNB (Swiss National Bank) and UBS made an agreement to transfer approximately USD 60 billion of currently illiquid securities and various assets from UBS to a separate fund entity [8]

On 4 November UBS announced that their third quarter Group net profit was in line with their 16 October pre announcement, with net profit attributable to UBS shareholders standing at CHF 296 million.

This quarter was affected by a further CHF 4.8 billon of write-downs and losses on risk positions, gain on own credit of CHF 2.2m and a tax credit of over CHF 900m.[9]

UBS announced on November 12 2008 that from 2009 no more than one-third of any cash bonus would be paid out in the year it is earned with the rest held in reserve. Share incentives would also vest after three years, and top executives would have to hold 75% of any vested shares, with share bonus accounts subject to “malus” charges.

It was also confirmed UBS chairman Peter Kurer would no longer have any extra variable compensation – just a cash salary and a fixed allotment of shares, which cannot be sold for four years. This aligned the chairman’s rewards with group performance while minimising risk.UBS also said that Kurer hoped that others would follow his lead.It was possible that regulators and influential groups such as the Financial Stability Forum would help his cause.[10]

In November 2008, UBS put $6 billion of equity into the new “bad bank” entity, keeping only an option to benefit if the value of its assets were to recover. Heralded as a “neat” package by the NY Times, the UBS structure guaranteed clarity for UBS investors by making an outright sale.[11]

[edit] Major Sponsorship Deals

[edit] Controversies

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Down the Matterhorn", The Economist (July 12, 2007). Retrieved on 22 July 2007. 
  2. ^ ""Corporate FAQ"". Retrieved on April 20, 2007.
  3. ^ http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120038661655190977.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
  4. ^ ""History of UBS (1937-1939)"". Retrieved on January 10, 2007.
  5. ^ UBS - Board of Directors
  6. ^ "Swiss Bank UBS posts $12B Losses". Retrieved on 2008-09-19.
  7. ^ ""UBS Named a 2006 Working Mother 100 Best Company by Working Mother Magazine"". Retrieved on October 29, 2006.
  8. ^ "Times Online - UBS and Credit Suisse secure $70bn". Timesonline.com. Retrieved on 2008-10-20.
  9. ^ "UBS set to make 'small' profit in third quarter". Guardian. Retrieved on 2008-11-08.
  10. ^ "Bankers to learn what "malus" is". NY times. Retrieved on 2008-11-12.
  11. ^ "Bad Assets Don’t Just Disappear". NY times. Retrieved on 2008-11-24.
  12. ^ ""Bank Says Shredded Papers May Not Have Involved Nazis, New York Times, January 16, 1997"". Retrieved on April 22, 2007.
  13. ^ ""Die kurze Woche Anarchie"". Retrieved on May 8, 2008.
  14. ^ BofA asks $20M in dispute vs. ex-employees from the Charlotte Business Journal 22/07/2002
  15. ^ HealthSouth Ex-CFO Helps Suit from the Wall Street Journal
  16. ^ HealthSouth: Auditors and Banks from University of Wollongong library
  17. ^ BW Online | June 7, 2004 | Peter Wuffli
  18. ^ $29 million award in UBS in bias suit from International Herald Tribune 08/04/2005
  19. ^ Laura Zubulake, Plaintiff v. UBS Warburg LLC, UBS Warburg and UBS AG, Defendants , 02 Civ: 1243 (SAS) (GWG) Trial transcript pp. 1700-02.
  20. ^ UBS Must Pay Ex-Saleswoman $29.3 Mln in Sex Bias Case from Bloomberg 06/04/2005
  21. ^ Lawsuit alleges discrimination at UBS:Ex-employees say brokerage firm's diversity attempts mocked non-whites from msnbc.com 18/10/2005
  22. ^ NATIONWIDE CLASS ACTION FILED AGAINST UBS FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC. ALLEGING A COMPANY-WIDE PRACTICE OF RACIAL DISCRIMINATION from Berger & Montague 18/10/2005
  23. ^ Des banques Suisses contournent nos règles Brésiliennes from LeTemps.ch (French)
  24. ^ UBS and Credit Suisse bankers arrested in Brazil tax probe from Reuters 23 April 2008
  25. ^ UBS Executive, Ex-Morgan Lawyer Charged With Fraud from Bloomberg 01/03/2007
  26. ^ THE WALL STREET JOURNAL: UBS Holders Score Win from Royal Dutch Shell PLC 24/04/2008
  27. ^ UBS to cut 5,500 jobs next year
  28. ^ AFP: FBI 'to probe Swiss bank UBS' in tax dodging case
  29. ^ Tax scandal leaves Swiss giant reeling, The Observer, 29 June 2008
  30. ^ US Senate: UBS, Liechtenstein aided US tax cheats
  31. ^ US Senate claims UBS 'colluded' behind Swiss bank secrecy laws
  32. ^ Offshore Tax Evasion Costs U.S. $100 Billion, Senate Probe of UBS and LGT indicates
  33. ^ "Statement on Indictment of UBS Executive". BusinessWire. Retrieved on November 12, 2008.
  34. ^ ""UBS suffers offshore blow as US indicts wealth management head"". FT Online. Retrieved on November 13, 2008.
  • Nolmans, Erik (Nov. 14, 2005). "UBS Fastens its Seatbelts". Fortune, p. 20.
  • Vincent, Isabel. Pursuit of Justice. New York: Morrow, 1997.
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