Subscribe

UBS says volatility hurting wealth management unit

The company's CEO says client activity 'recovered somewhat' in the first quarter.

UBS Group AG’s wealth management and investment-banking businesses failed to recover in the first quarter as “challenging” conditions continued into this year, chief executive officer Sergio Ermotti said.

“The conditions we noted in our most recent outlook statement have persisted throughout the quarter,” Mr. Ermotti said at a conference in London on Wednesday. The bank has a “very tough year-on-year comparative from revenue standpoint of view” at the securities unit, with revenue boosted by equities and currencies in the first quarter of 2015, while market volatility is undermining wealth management, he said.

Banks around the globe have been hurt by record-low interest rates, plunging oil prices and cooling emerging-market growth, with Jefferies Group reporting on Tuesday that revenue from trading stocks and bonds tumbled 82% in its fiscal first quarter. Speaking at the same conference, Deutsche Bank AG co-CEO John Cryan forecast an unprofitable year, while Societe Generale SA CEO Frederic Oudea said there may be a need to speed up cost cuts.

“While client activity has recovered somewhat from the lows we saw in the fourth quarter, transaction-based revenues have not rebounded to levels typically seen in previous first quarters,” Mr. Ermotti said.

UBS shares declined as much as 5.9%, the biggest drop in more than a month, trading at 15.77 Swiss francs at 4:59 p.m. in Zurich, down 4.8%. They have decreased about 19% this year, while Deutsche Bank is down 24%.

The wealth-management unit, the lender’s largest, had pretax profit of 344 million Swiss francs ($348 million) in the fourth quarter, down 47% from a year earlier, with 3.4 billion francs in net new money outflows. Mr. Ermotti said that the Zurich-based bank remains focused on “quality over quantity” when it comes to attracting new money.

Mr. Ermotti signaled that revenue at the securities unit declined from a year earlier, when currency income was boosted by the Swiss central bank’s surprise decision to remove its franc ceiling as well as equities trading in the Asia-Pacific region.

“We also have a very tough year-on-year comparative from a revenue standpoint,” Mr. Ermotti said, when commenting on the investment bank. Activity levels across the advisory industry have “slowed markedly,” while in the equities business, “flat volumes in Europe and sharp declines in Asia do not favor our geographic mix,” he said.

The investment bank, run by Andrea Orcel, reported a 63% drop in pretax profit to 80 million francs in the fourth quarter, a period previously described by Ermotti as the “most challenging” in several years. The unit reported a return on equity of 4.4% in the three months through December, below the cost of equity that many analysts estimate at 10%.

Related Topics: ,

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Credent Wealth Management attracts two new partner-advisors

Indiana-based $2.5B RIA has added 12 firms since it was founded in 2018.

Tech rally fuels equities rally, commodities gain

But there are headwinds including US data, Japan intervention.

Treasuries rise ahead of US inflation data

Early trade Friday paused a selloff in global bonds.

Bad day for Bitcoin, net $218M withdrawn from ETFs

Hong Kong will become latest market to launch crypto ETFs.

UBS share buybacks may be at risk from regulators

The banking group may need an extra $20B buffer under new rules.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print