Family Office
Peter Wuffli is forced to step down as CEO of UBS

Swiss bank's board rejects Wuffli as heir apparent to chairman
Marcel Ospel. Peter Wuffli has resigned as CEO of UBS. He has
been replaced by Marcel Rohner, formerly Wuffli's deputy and head
of the Zurich-based megabank's wealth-management and
business-banking division.
Rohner "is well prepared for his new role and enjoys the full and
undivided confidence of" UBS' board of directors, according to
UBS.
Raoul Weil, now head of UBS' international wealth-management
business, will take Rohner's place as leader of UBS' global
wealth-management and business-banking businesses.
Succession planning
In addition to stepping down as UBS' senior manager, Wuffli has
relinquished "all of his functions at UBS," according to a
statement from UBS board of directors.
Wuffli's departure seems to be connected to a dispute over
succession between UBS' board on one side and UBS chairman Marcel
Ospel -- who has agreed to serve "at least" one more three-year
term in that role, apparently at the board's urging -- and Wuffli
on the other.
"A year ago, as part of UBS's systematic management succession
planning, Marcel Ospel expressed a wish to initiate a
generational change of management at UBS and therefore retire
from his function within the foreseeable future," according to
UBS' board. "He also proposed that Peter Wuffli be nominated his
successor. After careful evaluation, the board of directors
decided not to accept his proposal. It does not view the
succession of the CEO to the position of chairman as automatic.
Instead, the board identifies independently the composition of
the leadership team which, in its opinion, suits the bank the
best."
UBS' board and Wuffli "therefore decided to institute
generational change only in UBS's operational management," the
statement continues.
Wuffli, who is 49, succeeded Ospel, who will be 57 next month, as
CEO of UBS in 2001. Ospel in fact has been a kind of mentor to
Wuffli since their days together at Swiss Bank Corporation (SBC),
which merged with Union Bank of Switzerland in 1998 to form
UBS.
Ewige Einheit
UBS is giving short shrift to the notion -- mainly promulgated by
the Wall Street Journal -- that Wuffli got the ax because
he favored breaking the bank up.
"There was no disagreement over strategy," UBS group spokesman
Cristoph Meier told Reuters late yesterday. "There was
nothing like that."
UBS is still wedded to a "one-bank strategy" that combines
investment banking with wealth and asset management, Meier
emphasized.
Those who like the idea that Wuffli is out because he wanted to
spin off UBS' investment-banking business point to the bank's
recent hedge-fund woes. In May 2007 it closed its Dillon Read
Capital Management alternative-investment unit after it owned up
to a $124-million loss in the subprime-mortgage market.
UBS' new CEO Rohner is 42. He began his career as a teaching
assistant with the Institute for Empirical Research in Economics
at the University of Zurich. He joined Union Bank of Switzerland
in 1992 as assistant to the bank's head of derivatives. The next
year he joined SBC as head of European market-risk control for
its Warburg Dillion Read investment-banking subsidiary.
Weil is 47. He started his career with SBC in 1984, initially in
portfolio-management systems development, then as a
private-banking executive.
UBS is the biggest wealth manager in the world. -FWR
.