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UBS's Freshly Combined Global Wealth Management Disappoints

Profit before tax at wealth management was 1.1 billion Swiss francs ($1.1 billion), just under the company-compiled estimates of 1.2 billion francs.

By Patrick Winters and Jan-Henrik Förster

(Bloomberg) --UBS Group AG’s freshly-combined wealth management unit didn’t get off to the best start.

The business, which accounts for about half UBS’s pre-tax profits, posted first-quarter earnings that missed analyst estimates. That disappointment and lower-than-expected asset-management results eclipsed a star performance at the investment bank, sending the shares down the most in three months.

Chief Executive Officer Sergio Ermotti has spent much of his tenure refocusing the bank on wealth management, shrinking investment-banking businesses including fixed-income trading. The bank is seeking to boost efficiency and growth by combining the two wealth-management businesses into a single one known as Global Wealth Management, appointing Martin Blessing and Tom Naratil as co-heads of the business.

‘Downgrade Risks’

“First quarter results are disappointing across all divisions except investment banking and we do not expect consensus to upgrade but potentially see risks of downgrades," Kian Abouhossein, an analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a note to clients.

UBS shares fell as much as 4.4 percent, the most since late January, and were trading 3.4 percent lower as of 2:38 p.m. in Zurich.

Profit before tax at wealth management was 1.1 billion Swiss francs ($1.1 billion), just under the company-compiled estimates of 1.2 billion francs. Net new money of 19 billion francs was slightly less than the year-earlier number, though in line with the bank’s own targets.

“The wealth business looks a little bit on the weak side to be honest,” said Piers Brown, an analyst at Macquarie Bank Ltd. “Although net new money is strong, the margin looks a bit weaker.”

Invested assets, an important indicator of the size of client funds managed by the bank, dropped for the first time since June as currency swings from a weaker dollar left their mark. That’s because assets are worth less when translated back into the stronger Swiss franc, the bank’s reporting currency.

Ermotti said earlier this year the bank is considering reporting results in U.S. dollars rather than Swiss francs to help avoid currency headwinds. About 70 percent of the bank’s client asset base is dollar-based and the shift to dollar-reporting will happen later this year, he also said in the interview today.

Investment Bank

The investment bank posted pretax profit of 589 million francs, the Zurich-based bank said in a statement on Monday, beating the average estimate for 463 million francs in a company-compiled survey of 24 analysts.

Revenue from equities trading as well as advising on mergers, IPOs and debt issuance helped fuel gains at the investment bank, with UBS saying the results would have been even stronger excluding currency effects. The bank gave a mixed outlook for the second quarter, saying U.S. interest-rate increases will support dollar income and that there’s good momentum in the business even as some funding costs rise and volatility is muted.

Asked about a Bloomberg story that referenced ongoing internal debates about the investment bank, Ermotti said today in an interview with Bloomberg Television that it’s “very difficult to see the merit” of those reports.

Ermotti rejigged the bank’s targets earlier this year, committing to buy back as much as 2 billion francs of stock over three years. The buyback will start in the second quarter, UBS said on Monday. It’s also targeting 2 percent to 4 percent growth in net new money for global wealth management and a cost-to-income ratio of under 75 percent for the group.

Expansion Mode

Ermotti is shifting UBS into expansion mode and returning capital to shareholders after merging the bank’s two wealth-management units. The Swiss bank, which has increasingly focused on banking for rich clients, is prioritizing growth in the U.S. and Asia where it expects the wealth of ultra-high net worth individuals to increase quicker than elsewhere.

In the second quarter, funding costs will be higher related to long-term debt and capital instruments, while the bank also cautioned that market volatility remains muted. UBS’s CET1 ratio -- a key factor of financial strength -- dropped to 13.1 percent in the first quarter, below company-compiled estimates for 13.3 percent.

The investment bank now generates most of its income from equities, dealmaking and underwriting and benefited from a return to volatility in the first quarter, though Ermotti warned in a Bloomberg TV interview that client activity was more muted in February and March.
 
To contact the reporters on this story: Patrick Winters in Zurich at [email protected] ;Jan-Henrik Förster in Zurich at [email protected] To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dale Crofts at [email protected] Paul Armstrong
 

 

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