Family Office
UBS chops its wealth-management operations in two

Swiss bank walls off U.S. retail banking, emphasizes home-market
businesses. Zurich-based UBS is cutting its wealth-management
division in two. Instead of a global wealth-management unit
taking in its mainly Swiss private-banking business along with
its mainly U.S. retail-brokerage business, it's going with Wealth
Management & Swiss Bank to house its Swiss, European and Asian
private banking and its Swiss corporate banking, and Wealth
Management Americas primarily as a repository for it U.S.
wirehouse.
"The formation of the two new divisions will help to re-build our
reputation and recognition," says UBS CEO Marcel Rohner.
"Management will focus on [its] specific strategic challenges
which, among others, are changes in client behavior, new market
dynamics and a tight regulatory environment."
Rumors
Francesco Morra, former head of UBS' wealth-management business
in Western Europe (ex Switzerland), the Mediterranean, the Middle
East and Africa, and Juerg Zeltner former head of UBS'
wealth-management business in northern, eastern and central
Europe, have been named co-heads of Wealth Management & Swiss
Bank; Marten Hoekstra -- who had assumed Raoul Weil's position as
global head of UBS' wealth-management and business-banking
segments in November 2008 after Weil stepped down following his
indictment by a Florida grand jury for conspiring to defraud the
U.S. government -- gives up his interim role but continues as
head of the Swiss bank's wealth-management operations in the
Western Hemisphere.
In practice, Morra will concentrate on UBS's Swiss business- and
private-banking operations; Zeltner will focus on private banking
in the non-Swiss Old World, and Hoekstra "will continue to focus
on gaining scale and market share in the domestic US wealth
management market as well as further developing the Canadian and
Latin American markets," UBS says in a press release.
The lack of detail concerning UBS' U.S. retail-brokerage business
is intriguing given recent rumors that the bank is in talks to
sell or merge that business, which has about 7,800 brokers
(including advisors acquired when UBS bought the retail
brokerages of Piper Jaffray and KeyCorp in 2006) in nearly 500
branches. The Swiss bank recently put out feelers concerning a
retail-brokerage joint venture -- perhaps along the lines of the
proposed merger of Morgan Stanley's private-client division and
Citigroup's Smith Barney -- with Wachovia Securities, according
to a report in the new York Post. San Francisco-based
Wells Fargo acquired Wachovia Securities, along with the rest of
Charlotte, N.C.-based Wachovia, at the end of 2008.
The announcement came after UBS today posted a loss of $7.6
billion for its fourth quarter 2008 -- a good 30% worse than the
analysts' consensus estimate -- and said it would eliminate
nearly 2,200 positions -- most from its battered
investment-banking division -- in a series of moves calculated to
re-focus the banking giant on its home market.
The Swiss bank's results would have been worse were it not for a
fortuitous change in accounting rules that lets firms value
assets -- no matter how depreciated at the moment -- at prices
they could command at maturity. (In other words, accounting rules
put in place to keep publicly traded companies on the straight
and narrow after the Enron debacle have been done away with.)
UBS' re-commitment to its home market is interesting. Its move
out of Switzerland into neighboring countries in Europe in the
late 1990s was largely in reaction to liberalizing initiatives by
European Union members to stem the flow of private-banking assets
into Switzerland. At the same time, de-regulation of U.S.
financial-service markets and a bull run of nearly two decades
made retail brokerage seem a necessary ingredient to competing in
U.S. markets with home-grown multi-line banks. -FWR
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