The Borneo Post

Bad loan provisions weigh on UBS earnings

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ZURICH: Swiss banking giant UBS reported yesterday a dip in second quarter earnings as it stepped up provisions for bad loans in a global economy that has been sent into a tailspin by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Net profit slid by 11 per cent from the April-June period last year to US$1.2 billion (1.1 billion euros), while operating profits nudged 2 per cent lower to US$7.4 billion.

Banks need to set aside certain amounts for expected loan losses depending on the macroecono­mic situation and their expectatio­ns whether a firm will be able to pay it back, irrespecti­ve of whether it has yet to miss a payment.

The global economy is facing a contractio­n unseen since the Great Depression and a wave of company failures.

UBS took US$272 million in charges to treat expected loan losses in the second quarter, after US$268 million in the first. The added credit loss expenses pushed down the bank’s performanc­e. Without them, profit before tax would have increased by 10 per cent in the second quarter, instead sliding by 5 per cent, UBS said.

The bank declined to offer specific guidance about dividend payments and share buybacks but said its “intention is to continue to pay out excess capital and maintain the overall capital returns to shareholde­rs consistent with previous levels.”

It did indicate it may resume share repurchase­s in the fourth quarter of this year depending on business developmen­ts.

Government­s in many nations have put pressure on companies to halt such payments to shareholde­rs when they are cutting staff and tapping government support mechanisms put in place to attenuate the coronaviru­s economic shock.

 ??  ?? UBS reported a dip in second quarter earnings as it stepped up provisions for bad loans in a global economy that has been sent into a tailspin by the coronaviru­s pandemic. -- AFP photo
UBS reported a dip in second quarter earnings as it stepped up provisions for bad loans in a global economy that has been sent into a tailspin by the coronaviru­s pandemic. -- AFP photo

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