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UBS-Credit Suisse merger: What the future will look like for the 'superbank'
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  • UBS-Credit Suisse merger: What the future will look like for the 'superbank'

UBS-Credit Suisse merger: What the future will look like for the 'superbank'

agence france-presse • April 26, 2023, 10:24:37 IST
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UBS CEO Sergio Ermotti revealed how Switzerland’s largest bank will integrate Credit Suisse once the takeover is completed in the coming months

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UBS-Credit Suisse merger: What the future will look like for the 'superbank'

Zurich: UBS chief executive Sergio Ermotti shed light Tuesday on how Switzerland’s biggest bank will go about integrating Credit Suisse once the takeover is completed in the coming months. On 19 March, UBS agreed to buy its stricken closest domestic rival for $3.25 billion, backed up by some hefty Swiss government guarantees. As UBS unveiled its quarterly results, here are some of the outlines that emerged of how Ermotti sees the future banking juggernaut shaping up: Growing wealth management The takeover will create a superbank in charge of $5 trillion of invested assets, said Ermotti, who led UBS from 2011 to 2020 and was called back in to carry out the complex merger operation. **Also Read: More than $68 billion withdrawn from Credit Suisse ahead of UBS takeover** Achieving such a level of assets is the equivalent of “seven to 10 years of net new money” coming in, he said. “It will make us the second-largest wealth manager in the world,” he said, and “the only truly global player” in the field. The merger is a chance to strengthen its wealth management reach, with Ermotti underlining that UBS is stronger in North America while Credit Suisse is better positioned in Southeast Asia.

The merger will also significantly strengthen UBS in South America.

Prudence The merger will also strengthen asset management and investment banking, but Ermotti warned that “activities outside our strategic focus and risk appetite will be run down”. Investment banking and asset management were central to the scandals that crippled Credit Suisse. Its risk culture was singled out after the British financial firm Greensill went bankrupt and the US hedge fund Archegos imploded. On Monday, Credit Suisse announced it was ending the complex and controversial transaction planned with US investment banker Michael Klein for restructuring its investment banking arm, thus leaving it to UBS to sort out. [caption id=“attachment_12507042” align=“alignnone” width=“640”] The merger is a chance to strengthen its wealth management reach, with Sergio Ermotti underlining that UBS is stronger in North America while Credit Suisse is better positioned in Southeast Asia. Reuters[/caption] Prudence is dear to Ermotti’s vision. UBS will be “maintaining our strong culture and prudent risk management”, said Ermotti, who conducted a major restructuring — notably in investment banking — during his first spell at the Zurich-based institution. Impact within Switzerland The merger raises serious concerns about jobs and competition in Switzerland. Ermotti urged investors to be patient, insisting that public debate within the country is currently “totally based on emotions and in many cases, totally uninformed”. He said any decisions, to be taken within the coming months, would be “based on facts”. **Also Read: UBS takeover of Credit Suisse to spark job crisis in London as 10,000 positions on the line across world** The combined UBS and Credit Suisse workforce amounted to around 120,000 employees at the end of 2022, including 37,000 within Switzerland. Job cuts the ‘painful’ part Ermotti said there was no immediate need for layoffs because “we still need to operate the two banks separately for the foreseeable future”. The question will arise in the longer term, and “that’s the most painful part of this transaction”. However, he intends to proceed in a transparent fashion and is partly counting on natural turnover and retirements to limit the number of job cuts. Rebuilding customer confidence UBS intends to complete the takeover by the end of June, and has already received the approval of the Swiss, British and US Federal Reserve authorities. Some customers may be nervous after the implosion of Credit Suisse, but Ermotti voiced confidence that UBS will retain and win back clients. In the first quarter of 2023, UBS’s wealth management business saw inflows of $28 billion, including $7 billion during the last 10 days of March. Read all the Latest News, Trending News, Cricket News, Bollywood News, India News and Entertainment News here. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

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Credit Suisse UBS job cuts investment banking Takeover wealth management risk management Competition Integration Asset Management credit suisse takeover invested assets global player customer confidence banking scandals natural turnover rebuilding confidence banking future
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