Family Office
UBS plans to buy Key's retail brokerage business

UBS targets another broker-dealer hard on its purchase of Piper's
retailer. UBS says it plans to buy McDonald Investments' retail
brokerage business from Cleveland, Ohio-based KeyCorp for "up to"
$280 million. The Swiss megabank says McDonald fits nicely with
the retail brokerage business it recently acquired from Piper
Jaffray. Together, says UBS, the two acquisitions "strengthen"
UBS' U.S wealth-management business.
What's on and off the table
Whether grabbing Piper's and KeyCorp's brokerages truly
strengthens UBS remains to be seen. But it certainly gives the
Zurich-based wealth-management giant -- an inveterate
coast-hugger prior to the Piper purchase -- better geographic
distribution. McDonald and its Gradison affiliates have 340
brokers in 51 branch offices in the Northeast, Midwest, Mountain
region and Pacific Northwest. When the sale to UBS was announced
last spring, Piper had around 800 brokers in 90 branches, most of
them west of the Mississippi.
UBS and KeyCorp expect the deal to close early in 2007.
KeyCorp seems keen to emphasize that the sale to UBS touches
McDonald's branch network only. McDonald's former institutional
businesses -- including investment banking, debt and equity
capital markets, public finance and research -- will stay with
KeyCorp's KeyBanc Capital Markets unit.
Nor does the deal with UBS put KeyCorp out of the
wealth-management realm. "Key will retain its separate and
existing Key Trust, Key Wealth Management and Key Private Banking
business groups," says KeyCorp CEO Henry Meyer. In addition,
KeyCorp's retail banking business will continue offering
"products such as mutual funds and annuities," adds Meyer.
The better to eat you with
UBS foreshadowed its plan to purchase another regional
broker-dealer late last month. It also said it was thinking about
buying a trust company and perhaps an "upscale, boutique"
registered investment advisor or two, all the better to compete
for assets in the U.S. high-net-worth market.
With the possible exception of Mellon -- apparently on hiatus as
it concentrates on rationalizing its service offerings -- UBS is
the most acquisitive wealth-management company on the planet.
In addition to Piper and McDonald -- and leaving out its imminent
trust and boutique RIA purchases -- UBS has in the past three
years bought Lloyds Bank in France, Merrill Lynch's German
private banking operations, the U.K.'s Laing & Cruickshank and
Scott Goodman Harris, Germany's Sauerborn Trust, Luxembourg's
American Express Bank, Julius Baer's North American
private-client business, Dresdner Bank's Latin American
wealth-management operations and Brazil's Banco Pactual.
And of course UBS bought Paine Webber in 2000.
Other than mentioning the "up to" price of $280 million, UBS and
KeyCorp are keeping stumm about the details of the
transaction. - FWR
.