UBS reports best annual profit since 2006, sets more ambitious goals

Tue Feb 01 2022
Austin Collins (572 articles)
UBS reports best annual profit since 2006, sets more ambitious goals

UBS on Tuesday reported its best annual profit since the global financial crisis, emboldening it to hike share buybacks and set more ambitious profit goals as it banks that more digital products will result in hefty cost-savings.

In its first major strategic review since Chief Executive Ralph Hamers took the helm in November 2020, Switzerland’s biggest bank said it wants to use technology to help it increase revenues and reach more customers in the years ahead, while also continuing to bring costs down.

“UBS is in better shape than ever,” Hamers said in a statement. “We’re adapting our coverage models to deliver more digital and scalable advice as well as bespoke solutions.”

It announced plans for up to $5 billion in share buybacks for this year after repurchasing $2.6 billion in 2021 and said it was proposing a dividend hike to $0.50 per share for last year from $0.37 in 2020.

UBS shares were up 3% in pre-market trade.

Buoyed by robust trading activity from ultra-wealthy clients as well as dealmaking, UBS’s net profit for 2021 surged 14% to $7.5 billion, its strongest performance since 2006 and better than a consensus estimate of around $7 billion from analysts compiled by the bank.

Profit for the fourth-quarter tumbled a smaller-than-expected 18% to $1.3 billion, dragged down by a 650 million euro hike in provisions set aside to cover penalties in a case accusing the bank of helping wealthy clients in France evade taxes.

UBS revised its goal for earnings it wants to generate off underlying expenses, setting a 70%-73% target for its cost-income ratio, more ambitious than its previous target of 75-78%.

It also said it aimed to boost the returns it generates off core or common equity tier 1 capital to 15%-18%, up from its previous guidance for 12%-15%.

The world’s biggest wealth manager, UBS sailed through the COVID-19 pandemic thanks to buoyant markets and a spike in trading by its ultra-wealthy clients. read more

On Tuesday, the bank said that during the fourth quarter it had continued to see high levels of client activity in its core wealth management division, with increases in revenue from lending, recurring fees and transactions pushing up operating income 13% year-on-year.

The division posted $26.9 billion in fresh fee-generating client inflows, which with gains in asset prices, pushed invested assets in its global wealth management business up 3% from the previous quarter to $3.3 trillion.

Its asset management division saw pre-tax profit fall 17% with the bank citing more “normalized levels” for performance fees, while profits from investment banking soared 35% on the back of higher revenues from trading and dealmaking.

“We find 4Q21 results strong, continuing to show good revenue momentum across the board, while cost control was also impressive this quarter,” Jefferies analysts said in a note.

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Austin Collins

Austin Collins

Austin Collins is our Europe, Asia, & Middle East Correspondent. He covers news related to Stock Market. In past he has worked for many prestigious news & media organizations. He is based in Dubai