The Manila Times

UBS to give report on first full-year results

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ZURICH, Switzerlan­d: Swiss banking giant UBS will on Tuesday report its first full-year results since swallowing rival Credit Suisse, with investors keen for details on a US-centered growth strategy hinted at by the mega-bank.

Clues as to how Switzerlan­d’s largest bank plans to reward its shareholde­rs after the dramatic takeover will also be of interest, observers say.

The bank is due to present its fourth-quarter earnings and results for all of 2023 an exceptiona­l year during which it was strong-armed by Swiss authoritie­s into the $3.25-billion takeover of Credit Suisse, which had been teetering on the verge of bankruptcy.

“Investors’ main focus will be on the three-year strategic plan for the combined entity, updated financial targets, and guidance on returning capital to shareholde­rs,” Vontobel analyst Andreas Venditti said in a research note.

During a conference last September, UBS chief Sergio Ermotti had promised to present a fresh three-year plan along with the annual results, since the Credit Suisse takeover had forced a rethink of the bank’s strategy.

‘Critical mass’

Ermotti highlighte­d among other things the potential for expanding the bank’s operations through more mergers and acquisitio­ns in the United States the world’s biggest market for business transactio­ns.

“In the US, I think it’s very important to look at the integratio­n of the investment bank and how those capabiliti­es will allow us to give our client advisers, financial advisers in the US even more opportunit­ies to help clients to monetize or through M&A transactio­ns for their own businesses,” he said.

“We now have finally [a] critical mass in the US in terms of bankers. And also we look at ways to diversify revenue streams in our wealth management business in the US.”

The results themselves were, meanwhile, expected to be less cheery.

For the fourth quarter alone, analysts polled by the Swiss financial news agency AWP expected UBS to take a $498-million net loss.

“Reported results will be impacted by significan­t restructur­ing charges,” Venditti said, pointing to an analyst consensus that the charges taken during the three-month period would tick in at $1.3 billion.

Analysts with ZKB, meanwhile, said that most focus would likely be on the pretax result, which is often seen as a better indicator of how a business is doing.

In the ‘profit zone’?

Investors, they predicted, will be scouring the fourthquar­ter results for signs of “further progress in the integratio­n of Credit Suisse and whether the adjusted result has already reached the profit zone, as promised by management.”

UBS agreed to the Credit Suisse takeover last March, and at the end of August it announced its decision to fully absorb its former rival, instead of listing it separately as some were calling for.

That decision will entail a vast restructur­ing, with integratio­n of Credit Suisse’s Swiss business alone set to slash 1,000 jobs in the wealthy Alpine country by the end of this year, and another 2,000 in the years to come, Ermotti said at the time.

The bank has said it aims to fully integrate Credit Suisse by 2026, raking in $10 billion in savings in the process.

Most work will need to be put into integratin­g Credit Suisse’s investment bank, which was at the heart of multiple scandals and crises that preceded its demise.

While investors initially appeared skeptical following the takeover deal, announceme­nts from UBS, including its decision not to accept state support, quickly calmed the markets, and the bank has since seen its share price swell more than 48 percent.

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