UBS deepens cost cuts as it integrates Credit Suisse
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UBS has set out plans for deeper cost cuts as the mammoth integration of rival Credit Suisse helped drive the Swiss bank to a second straight quarterly loss.
Chief executive Sergio Ermotti, parachuted back into the top job to oversee the takeover, had previously described 2024 as a “pivotal year” for the integration, and on Tuesday said UBS would now be aiming for $13bn of cost cuts by 2026, up from $10bn.
The sharper cuts were among several targets UBS announced, as the bank reported a fourth-quarter loss of $279mn, modestly better than the $285mn expected by analysts.
UBS said that it planned to lift assets in its key wealth management business to above $5tn by 2028 and complete the legal merger of both holding companies by the end of June.
Its wealth management business — especially in the crowded but fast-growing US market — is at the cornerstone of its strategy to capitalise on buying Credit Suisse, a deal orchestrated by Swiss regulators almost a year ago.
“2023 was a defining year in UBS’s history with the acquisition of Credit Suisse,” Ermotti said in a statement. “As we move to the next phase of our journey, we will focus on restructuring and optimising the combined businesses.”
In a sign of management’s confidence that they will eventually make the deal pay-off, UBS also said on Tuesday that it would reinstate its dividend of 70 cents a share in May and buy back up to $1bn of shares in 2024. The capital return programme was paused when it acquired Credit Suisse.
UBS shares have risen by 50 per cent since the rescue. At the end of last year, activist investor Cevian Capital took a €1.2bn stake in the group, betting the bank could double its valuation in the next three to five years.
“There is still a lot of work to do,” said Vontobel analyst Andreas Venditti. “The shares’ current valuation offers significant upside, should UBS be able to reach its long-term financial targets.”
The fourth-quarter loss comes on the heels of a $785mn loss in the third quarter, its first for six years, thanks to $2.2bn of restructuring costs. In total, UBS reported $4.7bn of integration and acquisition-related costs for 2023.
Among the expanses so far are $400mn of real estate costs, including breaking leases on offices occupied by its defunct rival.
Overall, headcount was reduced by 3,139 to 112,842 in the final quarter, taking the number of jobs axed last year to more than 16,000. Tens of thousands more jobs are expected to go in the coming years as the bank focuses on hitting cost reduction targets.
While the Credit Suisse deal has saddled the bank with integration costs, the fourth-quarter results allayed fears that clients would pull their assets from UBS in the near term to avoid any disruption from the takeover.
The bank reported $77bn of new assets and another $77bn of new deposits across wealth management and personal banking businesses in the final three months of last year.
Its investment bank slumped to a loss of $169mn in the period, which the lender said was mainly down to the costs of consolidating Credit Suisse’s business. UBS said it expected the division to return to profit in the first quarter.
The bank reported an annual profit of $30bn, which was almost entirely due to an accounting gain as a result of taking over Credit Suisse. It added that, overall, it expected a better first quarter of 2024, with an improvement in revenues.
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