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UBS share buybacks may be at risk from regulators

Employees pass between offices as UBS Group AG logo sits on a walkway at the UBS headquarters in Zurich, Switzerland, on Monday, Jan. 22, 2018. A UBS loan backed by shares of Steinhoff International Holdings NV was to blame for the majority of the Swiss bank’s 79 million francs ($82 million) in credit losses in the fourth quarter, a person with knowledge of the matter said. Photographer: Stefan Wermuth/Bloomberg

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

New bank capital rules recently put forward by Switzerland may crimp UBS Group AG’s ability to carry out share buybacks, weakening the firm’s appeal for investors, according to KBW analysts.

UBS faces additional capital needs of $17 billion if the sweeping changes were to be adopted, KBW analysts Thomas Hallett and Andrew Stimpson wrote in a note Friday. “Simplistically,” that requirement would translate into a reduction of $1.7 billion in annual payouts over a 10-year period and it would also be a drag on profitability, they said. 

That risk “is clearly unhelpful for a stock already trading at a significant premium to the rest of the sector in the next few years,” they said. 

Earlier this month, the Swiss government unveiled regulatory proposals that could see UBS get hit with around $20 billion in extra capital requirements, Bloomberg has reported. The rules are designed to make the country’s banking sector safer after the collapse of Credit Suisse last year pushed it to the brink of a systemic crisis.

Several other analysts have also taken a dimmer view on UBS’s stock as a result of the Swiss proposals. Citigroup Inc and BNP Paribas Exane have cut their recommendations while five other brokers have reduced their price targets, according to data tracked by Bloomberg.

UBS is the second-worst performer this year to date in the Bloomberg Europe Banks and Financial Services Index, which has 46 members. 

The lender has pushed back against the proposals, with Chairman Colm Kelleher saying earlier this week that they are the “wrong remedy.” The bank argues that Credit Suisse wasn’t brought down by a lack of capital but by a broken business model. 

The KBW analysts said in the note on Friday that UBS could still take actions to lower the capital impact. In addition, regulators may choose to offer concessions such as long phase-in periods to cushion the new rules, they said.

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