UBS to cut 3,000 Swiss jobs as it slashes costs by $10bn

UBS to cut 3,000 Swiss jobs as it slashes costs by $10bn
UBS also announced it would be keeping Credit Suisse’s domestic bank — and the ensuing job losses are expected to result in a backlash in Switzerland. Photo/Reuters
Short Url
Updated 31 August 2023
Follow

UBS to cut 3,000 Swiss jobs as it slashes costs by $10bn

UBS to cut 3,000 Swiss jobs as it slashes costs by $10bn

ZURICH: UBS Group plans to cut 3,000 jobs in Switzerland in the next couple of years, as it offered the first glimpse of how it intends to achieve more than $10 billion in cost savings after taking over Credit Suisse.

UBS also announced it would be keeping Credit Suisse’s domestic bank — and the ensuing job losses are expected to result in a backlash in Switzerland.

The world’s largest wealth manager could have spun off the business and floated it in an initial public offering, but the domestic bank has been a solid profit-maker for Credit Suisse and last year it was the only division in the black.

“Our analysis clearly shows that a full integration is the best outcome for UBS, our stakeholders and the Swiss economy,” CEO Sergio Ermotti said in a statement.

He wrote in a memo to staff that 1,000 jobs redundancies will result from integrating Credit Suisse’s domestic bank, while another 2,000 would result from the need to profoundly restructure Credit Suisse.

UBS shares were up 5 percent in morning trade, hitting highs not seen since 2008.

The prediction of over $10 billion in cost savings by 2026 compares with an earlier estimate of $8 billion by 2027. Most savings are set to come from reducing headcount.

Hanging on to existing Credit Suisse clients is seen as key if UBS is to successfully pull off the Herculean deal.

Credit Suisse reported net asset outflows of 39 billion Swiss francs ($44.4 billion) in the second quarter, underscoring that the rescue has failed to stem the loss of confidence in its franchise.

But UBS said the outflows took place slower than in previous quarters and turned positive in June.

UBS’ global wealth management reported net new money of $16 billion, its highest for the second quarter over a decade.

The shotgun marriage to its fallen rival at the behest of Swiss authorities — the first-ever merger of two global systemically important banks — has created opportunities and risks for UBS.

On the one hand, analysts note that UBS acquired Credit Suisse for a song — just 3 billion Swiss francs — while gaining a large asset base, good client relationships and talented employees.

At the same time, analysts warn that the complexity and the hasty nature of the deal bring significant execution risks as UBS must aggressively cut jobs, shrink Credit Suisse’s investment banking operations and manage outflows as clients seek to spread risk.

UBS booked a net profit of $29 billion for the second quarter. Groupwide UBS results include just one month of Credit Suisse earnings as the deal only closed in June.

The bumper profit is due to a huge one-off gain that reflects how the acquisition costs were far below Credit Suisse’s value. It was somewhat under a consensus estimate of $33.45 billion from a poll conducted by the bank.