Reports
Wealth Earnings Rise At UBS, AuM Gains

In broad terms, the results were highly positive and the bank's return on equity was ahead of its target. UBS did take a hit from the implosion of US hedge fund/family office Archegos, for which the bank, along with peers such as Credit Suisse and Nomura, had acted as a prime broker.
The global wealth management arm of UBS chalked up a first-quarter
2021 pre-tax profit of $1.409 billion, up from $1.218 billion a
year ago, the Zurich-listed group said today.
GWM operating income stood at $4.848 billion, against $4547
billion a year earlier. Meanwhile, operating costs rose slightly
to $3.439 billion from $3.329 billion a year before.
Total invested assets were $3.1 trillion in global wealth
management at the end of March. There were net new assets of
$36.2 billion, with inflows coming from all regions, UBS said in
a statement. Fee-generating assets stood at $1.328 trillion at
the end of March, rising by 4 per cent sequentially. (The
new fee-generating assets figure captures the growth in clients’
invested assets from net flows relating to mandates, investment
funds with recurring fees, hedge funds and private markets
investments, combined with dividend and interest payments into
mandates, less fees paid to UBS by clients.)
As for the group as a whole, profit before tax was $2.298
billion, rising 14 per cent on a year earlier, and that includes
net credit loss releases of $28 million – reversing some of the
credit loss provisions made a year ago when the COVID-19 pandemic
struck. The cost/income ratio of the group stood at 73.8 per
cent, a touch higher. Operating income rose by 10 per cent
year-on-year; operating costs rose by 8 per cent.
UBS was one of the banks affected by the implosion of the New
York-based hedge fund Archegos, although not as heavily as in the
case of Credit Suisse, its principal Swiss rival. UBS said the
default by the client of its prime brokerage businesses caused a
$434 million hit to the net profit attributable to shareholders.
Total net attributable profit was $1.8 billion.
UBS had a Common Equity Tier 1 capital ratio – a standard
international yardstick of banks’ financial buffers – of 14 per
cent, above its guidance target of around 13 per cent.
“In the first quarter of 2021, our clients benefited from our
broad capabilities, geographic reach and connectivity. They
continued to put their trust in us and looked to UBS for advice,
solutions and thought leadership in a dynamic market
environment,” Ralph Hamers, group chief executive, said. “This
was evidenced by the continued net inflows that helped our
invested assets across wealth and asset management grow by over
100 billion dollars to 4.2 trillion. This, together with
favourable market conditions and improved investor sentiment,
contributed to positive results in the first quarter of 2021,”
Hamers said.
UBS achieved a return on Common Equity Tier 1 capital of 18.2 per
cent, ahead of its target range of between 12 and 15 per cent.