Oct. 30 (Bloomberg) -- UBS AG, Europe's largest bank by assets,
reported its first quarterly loss in almost five years after declines
in the U.S. subprime mortgage market led to $4.4 billion in losses and
writedowns on fixed-income securities.
The third-quarter
net loss was 830 million Swiss francs ($712 million), or 49 centimes a
share, compared with net income of 2.2 billion francs, or 1.07 francs,
a year earlier, Zurich- based UBS said in a statement today. The loss
exceeded the 683 million-franc estimate of nine analysts surveyed by
Bloomberg.
The slumping U.S. housing market, which cost the
world's biggest securities firms and banks more than $30 billion in bad
loans and trading losses in the quarter, may lead to further
writedowns, UBS reiterated today. Chief Executive Officer Marcel
Rohner, who replaced Peter Wuffli four months ago, said losses at the
investment bank outweighed record earnings at UBS's wealth management
operation, the world's biggest.
"They didn't have very good
control over what was happening at their investment bank," said Mark
Glazener, a fund manager at Rotterdam-based Robeco, which holds about
$65 million of UBS shares. "It's still not very clear what is going on."
UBS
shares fell 55 centimes, or 0.9 percent, to 61.6 francs at 9:19 a.m. in
Zurich. The bank is the sixth-worst performer in the 63-member
Bloomberg Europe Banks and Financial Services Index in the past 12
months, down 21 percent. Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank (NYSE:DB) AG
lost 11 percent and Zurich-based rival Credit Suisse Group (NYSE:CS)
gained about 1 percent.
Deutsche, Credit Suisse
Deutsche
Bank, Germany's largest bank, said on Oct. 3 that third-quarter profit
rose at least 13 percent to more than 1.4 billion euros ($2 billion),
helped by a tax gain. The Frankfurt- based company publishes detailed
earnings tomorrow. Credit Suisse, which releases results Nov. 1, said
earlier this month that it may report an increase in earnings from
continuing operations of as much as 6 percent.
The pretax loss at
UBS's securities unit was 3.68 billion francs, versus last year's
profit of 1.08 billion francs. Losses and writedowns on residential
mortgage-backed bonds and collateralized debt obligations, bonds
created by repackaging other debt securities, amounted to $4.4 billion,
more than the $3.7 billion the bank estimated on Oct. 1.
Equities
trading revenue was little changed at 1.71 billion francs and fees from
arranging mergers jumped to 1.1 billion francs from 797 million francs
a year earlier.
At the main wealth-management division, profit
rose by almost a third to a record 1.62 billion francs. Earnings from
U.S. wealth management, including the former Paine Webber, advanced to
181 million francs from 43 million francs. Profit at the Swiss consumer
bank rose 4 percent to 591 million francs, and asset management climbed
30 percent to 369 million francs.
`Drag' on Earnings
UBS
and Merrill Lynch (OOTC:MERIZ) & Co. are the only two Wall Street
firms to report losses in the third quarter. New York-based Merrill
last week posted the biggest loss in its 93-year history after taking
$8.4 billion of writedowns. Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:C) , the largest U.S.
bank (NYSE:USB) , had $6.5 billion in costs for fixed-income trading
and underwriting losses and consumer loans gone bad.
UBS said
that while the fourth quarter "started with good results from all
business," the bank can't assume it "will continue as positively as it
began, or that the current difficulties will be resolved in the short
term."
Debt market writedowns, which cost Chief Financial Officer
Clive Standish and investment-banking head Huw Jenkins their jobs this
month, will probably lead to another unprofitable quarter at the
securities unit in the current three-month period, Rohner said today.
The division earned 1.36 billion francs in the final three months of
2006.
Subprime Risk
Today's results "are unlikely to put an
end to questions about losses from U.S. subprime," said Derek De Vries,
a London- based analyst at Merrill Lynch in a note to investors. He
rates the shares as "buy."
Dillon Read, which Wuffli closed
earlier this year at a cost of $300 million after traders misjudged the
housing slump, lost 380 million francs in the first six months of this
year. In 2006, the division accounted for $1.2 billion, or 17 percent,
of UBS's total fixed-income revenue.
Rohner, 43, UBS's fourth top
manager in the past nine years, is cutting 1,500 jobs and reducing
assets at the investment bank by 25 percent to 30 percent to cut risk.
UBS
said today that the bank had $16.8 billion invested directly in
residential mortgage-backed securities at the end of the quarter. It
also had $1.8 billion of CDOs, as well as $20.2 billion of so-called
super senior securities, or AAA-rated structured debt that gets paid
back ahead of other similarly rated securities in the case of a default.
UBS also said markdowns on leveraged finance positions were 480 million francs, gross of fees.
`Tougher'
"It
is going to be tougher, and it's going to be tougher for quite a
while," said Jane Coffey, head of equities at Royal London Asset
Management, which manages about $14 billion. "We're not really out of
the credit crunch time yet and a lot of these securities are very
difficult to value."
By reducing the size of its fixed-income
business, Rohner increases UBS's reliance on the fees it makes from
managing assets for clients with at least $1 million to invest. The
main wealth management operation accounted for about 40 percent of
pretax profit in 2006.
UBS last week agreed to buy Commerzbank
AG's French money management unit for 435 million euros to double funds
it oversees in Europe's third-largest economy. Since the start of 2006,
the bank has spent more than $4 billion on takeovers, including this
year's purchase of Standard Chartered Plc's Indian mutual fund unit,
and a majority in Hana Financial Group Inc.'s (OOTC:HNFGF) funds unit
in Korea.
With reporting by Elena Logutenkova in Frankfurt, Naga Munchetty in London and David Clarke in Edinburgh.