UBS CEO reportedly says the bank is over the worst

Sun Apr 13, 2008 4:28pm BST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss bank UBS (UBSN.VX) is over the worst of its problems and is strong enough to manage its risks and positions, the group's chief executive was quoted as saying on Sunday.

"We are no longer at the lowest point. There are certain factors that we cannot influence, however, such as the U.S. real estate market. There, there is volatility," CEO Marcel Rohner said in an interview with Swiss newspaper SonntagsZeitung.

"But we are strong enough to manage our risks and our positions. Now it is about winning back the destroyed trust on the customer side," Rohner told the newspaper.

Board member Peter Kurer, proposed by the board as a replacement for Marcel Ospel as chairman later this month, said in an interview published on Saturday that writedowns at the world's largest wealth manager had already been so aggressive they could not get any worse.

UBS has written down around $37 billion (18.7 billions pounds) in assets and cleaned out most senior management, including its chairman, after asking investors for emergency cash twice in two months, making it the world's hardest-hit bank from the subprime crisis.

Rohner said UBS would announce in May how many jobs would be cut in its investment bank, the source of the losses, but said estimates that 3,000 to 4,000 jobs would go in this division were too high.

The fixed-income business will be most affected by the job cuts, he said.

Rohner also said he was seeing trading in areas where there had been no markets for months.

"This is generally a sign that an end (of the financial crisis) is foreseeable," Rohner said.  Continued...

 
A share trader is pictured behind a mock one dollar bill and a mock 500 Euro note symbolizing a consumer credit note, at the German stock exchange in Frankfurt, December 18, 2008. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
Credit headwind

News headlines speak of recovery, but financing is still a big problem in Germany. The dearth of credit to tide firms over is frustrating policymakers, who are blaming reluctant banks and there is little agreement on how best to increase lending flows.  Full Article 

Market Update

  • UKUK
  • USUS
  • Europe
  • Asia
  • UK Most Actives
Currency
US $ inGBP =0.6081
Euro inGBP =0.8585
¥en inGBP =0.0065

Most Popular on Reuters UK

  • Articles
  • Videos