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    SEC Form 6-K filed by UBS Group AG Registered

    9/11/24 9:44:54 AM ET
    $UBS
    Major Banks
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    Get the next $UBS alert in real time by email
    6-K 1 bestofswitzerlandtran.htm bestofswitzerlandtran
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    UNITED STATES
    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    Washington, D.C. 20549
    _________________
    FORM 6-K
    REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE
     
    ISSUER
    PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16 UNDER
    THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
    Date: September 11, 2024
    UBS Group AG
    (Registrant's Name)
    Bahnhofstrasse 45, 8001 Zurich, Switzerland
    (Address of principal executive office)
    Commission File Number: 1-36764
    UBS AG
    (Registrant's Name)
    Bahnhofstrasse 45, 8001 Zurich, Switzerland
    Aeschenvorstadt 1, 4051 Basel, Switzerland
     
    (Address of principal executive offices)
    Commission File Number: 1-15060
     
    Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual
     
    reports under cover of Form
    20-F or Form 40-
    F.
    Form 20-F
     
    ☒
     
    Form 40-F
     
    ☐
     
    This Form 6-K consists of Q&A transcript related to the UBS Best
     
    of Switzerland conference held on
    September 11, 2024, which appear immediately following this page.
     
    1
    UBS Best of Switzerland
    Conference 2024
     
    11 September 2024
    Speeches by
    Sergio P. Ermotti
    , Group Chief Executive
     
    Officer,
     
    and
     
    Sabine Keller-Busse
    , President Switzerland
     
    and Personal & Corporate
     
    Banking
    Including Fireside
     
    Q&A
    Transcript.
    Numbers for slides refer to the UBS Best of Switzerland
     
    Conference presentation. Materials
     
    and a
    webcast replay are available
     
    at
    www.ubs.com/presentations
     
    Sergio P.
     
    Ermotti
    Welcome to our annual Best of Switzerland conference.
    Let me start by saying thank you for the
     
    trust and confidence you place in UBS and
     
    for joining us today.
    It is our privilege to bring this group of clients on the
     
    corporate and investor side together in our
     
    home market.
    This is the 27th time that we are hosting this flagship
     
    conference. This continuity underscores the relevance of
    Switzerland and our Swiss clients to UBS, and
     
    the importance of the Swiss equity
     
    market both domestically and
    internationally.
    You are
     
    about to hear from market-leading companies
     
    – companies that have shaped Switzerland’s
     
    reputation
    as one of the world’s most innovative and competitive
     
    economies globally.
    We are envied as a small nation that punches well above its
     
    weight. This is largely due to our diverse
     
    corporate
    landscape, consisting of both large multinationals
     
    and SMEs. And while some try to suggest
     
    a conflict between
    larger and smaller firms – a key concern
     
    for me – I am convinced that it is the combination
     
    of large and small,
    of domestic and international, and of
     
    broad-based and specialized firms that has
     
    made Switzerland the
    prosperous country we know.
    At UBS, we take our responsibility to Switzerland, our
     
    economy and our communities seriously.
     
    2
    Thanks to our financial strength, strong Swiss roots and international
     
    connectivity, we can offer expertise and
    solutions to support companies, both big and
     
    small. As a partner to over 200 thousand large,
     
    medium and
    small companies and one thousand pension
     
    funds, we help businesses succeed and thrive
     
    – by providing
    financing, advice and access to our global network
     
    and international presence.
     
    The integration with Credit Suisse has further broadened
     
    and deepened the offering of products and services
     
    to
    our Swiss and international clients.
     
    As such, we are an even stronger pillar of Switzerland’s
     
    position as the
    leading international wealth management
     
    hub. It is this position that allows our
     
    country to attract excess
    savings from around the world, lowering the financing
     
    costs for our households and corporations.
    I’m pleased with the progress we have made in our integration
     
    over the past 15 months. We are also mindful
    of the challenges we will be facing in the next
     
    phase, in particular when it comes
     
    to client migration and IT
    adjustments.
    Looking ahead, the macro-economic outlook is increasingly uncertain,
     
    with ongoing geopolitical tensions,
    monetary easing and the US elections contributing
     
    to heightened volatility.
    At the same time, companies are weighing up the
     
    opportunities and challenges created by emerging
    technologies such as Generative AI, increasing regulation
     
    and geopolitical and reputational risk.
    You can continue to count on us for strategic advice, thought leadership and to stay
     
    on top of market trends as
    you navigate this increasingly complex environment.
    I wish you a productive and enjoyable conference.
     
    Sabine Keller-Busse
    Slide 1 – Key messages
    Thank you Jens. Good morning, ladies
     
    and gentlemen.
     
    It’s been a year since we started the integration
     
    of Credit Suisse Swiss Bank into UBS. I’m now pleased
     
    to give
    you an update on the importance of our
     
    home market and our way forward here in Switzerland.
    After we were asked by Swiss authorities to step in
     
    to rescue Credit Suisse, we stabilized its client franchise
     
    in a
    matter of weeks. The merger of the Swiss
     
    entities in July of this year was an important
     
    milestone, and we are
    now in the middle of the big task of integrating
     
    the two banks.
    The Credit Suisse crisis showed the importance of having
     
    a sound and sustainable business model
     
    with a pricing
    that reflects the underlying risks and allows for adequate
     
    levels of profitability. It is therefore our duty to fix the
    structural issues that we inherited and get back
     
    to the return levels UBS had before the acquisition.
     
    Only with
    this we can remain a strong and reliable long-term partner for
     
    our clients and the Swiss economy.
    The rescue of
     
    Credit Suisse by UBS
     
    combines two leading franchises in Switzerland…
     
    and both UBS clients and
    former Credit Suisse
     
    clients are benefitting
     
    from our combined
     
    strength. We are
     
    excited that
     
    our clients will
     
    enjoy
    a greater offering, closer proximity and even better client
     
    experience. And we are totally committed to
     
    our Swiss
    clients and our home market.
     
     
    3
    Slide 6 – A cornerstone of the Swiss
     
    economy
    UBS has grown into a global leader, but our identity has always been rooted in our Swissness.
    Our heritage goes back over 160 years and
     
    our story includes the integration of more than 500
     
    financial
    businesses, including banks, asset managers
     
    and brokers. Each of these acquisitions and mergers
     
    have enriched
    our culture and contributed to our wealth of experience.
    The acquisition of Credit Suisse is a continuation of
     
    that story.
    Credit Suisse itself has a long and rich history, going back to pioneer Alfred Escher in the middle
     
    of the 19th
    century. For the vast majority of its history, it was a good and solid bank – both in Switzerland and
    internationally. It had built strong client relationships and a high quality workforce which we are excited to
     
    have
    welcomed at UBS here in Switzerland.
    Switzerland is not only UBS’s heritage and
     
    home market. Today,
     
    it remains one of the key pillars of the Group’s
    strategy. It is also the region where we deploy around 30% of our capital which is more than any other region,
    and earn a similar proportion of revenues.
    It is also where we employ most people. We are proud to be the country’s
     
    third largest private employer. We
    invest a lot into developing the next generation
     
    of talent, with 2,300 junior staff currently in our apprenticeship
    and trainee programs. This is equal to the sum of
     
    the two banks pre-acquisition. And the survey
     
    by Universum
    recently showed that business students in Switzerland
     
    choose UBS as their preferred employer. With 2.6 billion
    in taxes paid by the corporation and our employees
     
    in 2023, UBS is one of the country’s
     
    largest taxpayers and
    deeply embedded in the local economy, as purchases of goods and services for almost
     
    4 billion francs per year
    demonstrate. Furthermore, we are providing our home market
     
    with around 350 billion Swiss francs in credit.
    Our global reach, combined with our country-wide
     
    footprint and cutting-edge products, services and
    capabilities, makes us unique in Switzerland.
     
    This has earned us the label best
     
    bank in Switzerland in each of
    the last 10 years.
    It is our commitment and responsibility towards our clients
     
    to be a reliable and stable partner. Not just when
    the sun is shining but also, and even more importantly, in times of need.
    We demonstrated this commitment during the Covid
     
    crisis. We were able to play a leading role in establishing
    the SME lending program and providing our clients with
     
    much-needed liquidity in record speed.
    And last year,
     
    the UBS balance
     
    sheet for all
     
    seasons with a
     
    strong capital position,
     
    proven risk standards
     
    and a
    sustainable business model
     
    allowed us
     
    to do
     
    even more.
     
    We stepped
     
    up when
     
    we were
     
    asked to
     
    stabilize the
    Swiss and international capital markets
     
    by rescuing Credit Suisse.
    Slide 3 – UBS stepped in at time of need
    By the beginning of 2023, Credit Suisse’s structural
     
    lack of profitability and growing funding gap had practically
    made it unviable.
    In the Swiss Bank division, structural issues
     
    were starting to hurt the bottom line even earlier, from the
    beginning of 2022. This is remarkable given the sharp
     
    rise in interest rates during 2022 and 2023, which
    provided a strong tailwind to bank profits across the board. Instead, Credit Suisse’s
     
    Swiss Bank profits declined
    by nearly half.
    Clients got uncomfortable with this and the
     
    growing list of scandals. Credit Suisse was slowly but steadily
     
    losing
    the foundation of its existence – the trust of
     
    its clients.
     
     
    4
    And this eventually led to two bank runs over
     
    a time span of 6 months. The second of
     
    those two proved the
    final drop that caused the end of Credit Suisse as we knew
     
    it.
    But fortunately and to the benefit of the
     
    Swiss economy and global financial markets,
     
    UBS was stronger than
    ever.
    During that
     
    last bank
     
    run, a
     
    significant portion
     
    of the
     
    deposits that
     
    Credit
     
    Suisse had
     
    been losing
     
    were being
    transferred to us. That sign
     
    of trust gave us the
     
    confidence that we could stabilize
     
    Credit Suisse as we stepped
     
    in
    to be part of the solution.
    Slide 4 – Our strength and focus allowed us to stabilize
     
    CS’s client franchise
     
    And that is exactly what we did. Outflows turned
     
    into inflows almost immediately following
     
    the merger of the
    holding companies in June of 2023. We stabilized Credit Suisse’s
     
    client franchise, protecting its value and most
    importantly providing certainty and safety to clients.
    We have also been successful in keeping our best staff.
     
    We gained many great people from Credit Suisse who
    are further thriving at UBS. And where advisors did decide to
     
    leave, we have been able to keep the vast
    majority of the assets of the clients they served.
    And contrary to
     
    some of the
     
    noise in the
     
    public space, our
     
    indicators show growing
     
    support for the
     
    combined
    bank. For example, the surveys we conduct show improvements in people’s opinion of UBS across
     
    Credit Suisse
    clients
     
    and
     
    the
     
    broader
     
    public.
     
    Our
     
    strong
     
    business
     
    momentum
     
    is
     
    another
     
    indicator.
     
    And
     
    we
     
    frequently
     
    get
    unprompted feedback from clients that they are grateful that we
     
    rescued Credit Suisse.
    Slide 5 – We are executing on our integration plans with discipline
     
    The rescue of Credit Suisse and the subsequent business
     
    stabilization was followed by an intense period
    stretching over more than 20 weeks during which we thoroughly assessed
     
    various possible options for the
    Swiss Bank. The conclusion of our thorough analysis
     
    was that a full integration into UBS was the
     
    only realistic
    scenario given structural issues at Credit Suisse. We took
     
    this decision in the best interest of stakeholders, most
    important of which our clients, as well as
     
    the Swiss financial center.
    Since then, we have been executing on
     
    the integration with focus and determination
     
    – combining speed and
    the necessary precaution. We have already achieved several key
     
    milestones so far. Most notably the successful
    merger of our two Swiss legal entities on the 1st
     
    of July of this year. This laid the foundation for the most
    critical part of the process: migrating clients over
     
    to the UBS platform – which will eventually
     
    unlock the full
    synergy potential. For some more complex clients
     
    we have already started a manual onboarding process, but
    for most clients in Switzerland, the migration
     
    will happen in waves throughout 2025.
    We are determined to make
     
    this transition as easy
     
    and seamless as possible
     
    for our clients. And
     
    we are excited at
    the prospect of unlocking the full benefits of the merger for them. We will operate from one platform, allowing
    our clients to benefit from enhanced capabilities and
     
    an expanded offering.
     
     
    5
    Slide 6 – Aligned CS Switzerland’s organization
     
    setup to UBS’s, focusing on client
     
    needs
     
    Firstly, as we reported in April of this year,
     
    we aligned the Credit Suisse business setup
     
    to that of UBS to
    support a more cohesive client experience.
    At UBS, we are convinced our clients’ needs are best served
     
    by business divisions which specialize on
     
    specific
    client needs, but closely collaborate on a regional level.
     
    This model allows clients to benefit from global
    products and expertise tailored to regional needs, while allowing us
     
    to unlock efficiencies of scale.
    Credit Suisse’s financial and segment reporting was substantially
     
    different from UBS’s. The Credit Suisse Swiss
    Bank perimeter, as you can see on this slide, contained much more than just the Personal
     
    and Corporate bank.
    In the
     
    rest of
     
    this presentation
     
    we will
     
    focus on
     
    the combined Personal
     
    and Corporate Banking
     
    division within
    Switzerland. Where
     
    we talk
     
    about Credit
     
    Suisse P&C,
     
    both today
     
    and in
     
    terms of
     
    historical figures,
     
    we are
     
    referring
    to the aligned P&C scope within Credit Suisse, which
     
    offers better transparency for comparisons.
    Slide 7 – Reinforcing our position as the leading Swiss
     
    personal and corporate bank
     
    P&C will continue to be UBS’s second largest
     
    division, contributing close to 30% of
     
    the Group’s pre-tax profit.
    In Personal Banking, we now serve over 3
     
    million personal clients or around a third of Swiss households.
     
    Clients
    know us for our leading digital offering and premium
     
    products and service.
    Swiss corporate and institutional clients have
     
    always been at the heart of both UBS
     
    and Credit Suisse. What
    differentiates us from competitors is our holistic offering and global connectivity. We now serve more than
    200,000 corporate and institutional clients,
     
    including a third of all corporates in Switzerland.
     
    For large caps,
    UBS and Credit Suisse’s footprints were very similar. However for other corporates and real estate clients and
    particularly in the SME space, UBS had a
     
    significantly larger footprint, banking around 70% more firms
     
    than
    Credit Suisse. And we remain fully focused on these clients.
    In P&C, as is the case for the group as a whole, our
     
    strategy did not change with the acquisition of
     
    Credit
    Suisse. It was enhanced, as was the offering in our Personal,
     
    Corporate and Institutional clients.
    Having said that, there are very few areas of the former Credit Suisse business
     
    that do not fit our proven risk
    appetite or do not have a clear connection
     
    to the Swiss economy. From these, we are reallocating capital and
    investment into our strategic franchises.
    But let me be clear: Credit Suisse clients will be able to
     
    find at UBS almost everything they had before – and
    more. It is only in a few, small areas where this is not the case. And these areas add up to far less than
     
    1% of
    our business and client base. To give an example – we are discontinuing Factoring, a risky type of
     
    lending UBS
    stopped years ago. Fewer than 200 clients
     
    were using this service at Credit Suisse and we are working jointly
    with them to find alternatives, where possible.
    But now let’s move on to what’s in it for our
     
    clients.
     
     
    6
    Slide 8 – Private clients will benefit from even better services
     
    and digital capabilities
     
    Personal Banking is strategic to our Swiss
     
    business and clients will benefit from our
     
    consistent investments into
    products, services and capabilities.
    Thanks to our country-wide reach, Credit Suisse clients
     
    will have access to double the amount of branches
    Credit Suisse had on its own. We are closing duplicate branch locations
     
    and will keep the best ones. And more
    Credit Suisse clients will now get the service of a dedicated
     
    advisor.
    For clients who can and want to conduct their
     
    banking business online, we are Switzerland’s
     
    most digital bank.
    Over the past 3 years, we have invested more than
     
    300 million francs into digitizing our products
     
    and services,
    and we have seen mobile banking app usage
     
    increase by more than 40% in the last 18 months alone.
    And investing in our digital capabilities continues
     
    to be a top strategic priority for the
     
    future. Our combined
    scale gives us even more firepower, in terms of investment spend. And by combining the best digital
     
    and AI
    experts across UBS and Credit Suisse, we will lift our already-leading
     
    digital offering to an even higher level. We
    have compared our digital offering to CSX, and will create a “best
     
    of both worlds” experience by incorporating
    some of its most attractive features before the migration.
     
    And this
     
    will benefit all of our clients.
    We will
     
    also continue to
     
    operate Bank-now,
     
    one of
     
    Switzerland’s leading consumer finance
     
    banks, as a
     
    100%
    subsidiary of UBS Switzerland AG.
     
    Slide 9 – Combining the best of both worlds
     
    for Swiss corporates and institutions
    Combining the strong corporate and institutional franchises,
     
    our clients will get access to an even broader set
    of products and services.
    For example, we now offer a full range of export
     
    financing products for SMEs and for large corporates
     
    in
    Switzerland by embedding Credit Suisse’s complementary
     
    capabilities as lead arranger.
    All our clients can now benefit from the leading
     
    strength of Credit Suisse’s mid-market capabilities. On the
    other side, former Credit Suisse small-
     
    and mid-sized clients can now use M&A
     
    and succession planning services
    for which a higher client-
     
    and deal-size threshold existed at Credit Suisse. In this
     
    way, we can provide an even
    more comprehensive service to family-owned businesses
     
    and SMEs.
    To
     
    support their corporate activities abroad, former Credit Suisse
     
    clients can now access our local coverage
    teams providing corporate banking services in Hong
     
    Kong, Singapore, New York and Frankfurt.
    In IB research, clients from both the UBS and Credit Suisse sides have access
     
    to a broader coverage universe.
    We have now expanded our coverage of Swiss-listed
     
    stocks beyond the combined coverage of
     
    both banks
    before the merger which benefits both our corporate
     
    and institutional clients.
    And as we integrate our offering, we continue to
     
    innovate. For example, we recently launched Instant
     
    Business
    Credit in e-banking for corporate clients.
    So
     
    as
     
    you
     
    can
     
    see,
     
    we
     
    are
     
    determined to
     
    make
     
    the UBS-Credit
     
    Suisse
     
    combination a
     
    win/win for
     
    clients and
    shareholders. Only then we can create sustainable value
     
    for the long run.
     
     
     
    7
    Slide 10 – Addressing the root causes of CS P&C’s issues
    As we continue to focus on our clients,
     
    we are also fixing Credit Suisse’s structural issues in P&C. A deeper
     
    dive
    into these reveals a clear necessity to restructure certain parts of the
     
    business. Credit Suisse had realized this too
    and had started addressing these issues in 2022. By
     
    then it was too late.
    Firstly, at UBS, building holistic client relationships is a strategic priority that fits with
     
    our disciplined approach to
    capital. This was less the case historically at
     
    Credit Suisse, which is why some client relationships are now over-
    reliant on lending. Sometimes these loans were priced
     
    at levels that did not reflect the underlying risks, or
     
    did
    not even cover the cost of capital. This issue was
     
    made worse by declining trust that clients
     
    had in CS – they
    transferred their money out and did less and less business,
     
    while their loan balances remained unchanged.
    Secondly, risk standards were not adequately set and consistently enforced, resulting in a credit book that
    caused P&L volatility. Over the last year, Credit Suisse positions created 6 times as much stage 3 net credit
    impairments as UBS’s per billion of loans.
    Personal Banking had a suboptimal footprint and
     
    was chronically underinvested in. This led to
     
    structurally low
    profitability in that segment. The CSX app could only
     
    go so far in masking the underlying issues
     
    in the retail
    segment as a whole.
    And lastly, continuous deposit outflows left the bank with a significant and expensive
     
    loan overhang and
    deposit shortfall of around 65 billion or nearly
     
    30% of Credit Suisse Switzerland’s balance sheet at
     
    the time.
    And these issues undermined the profitability and stability
     
    of Credit Suisse, which eventually became fatal.
    Slide 11 – Restoring sustainable profitability levels
     
    in line with the best-in-class
    That’s why we are convinced – as we have always been
     
    – that our business has to be sustainably
     
    profitable.
    Only a profitable business is a healthy business. It
     
    is a prerequisite to remain a safe, strong and reliable partner
    to our clients and to the Swiss economy in the
     
    long term.
    One immediate priority therefore is to restore the profitability to the level that UBS
     
    achieved before the merger.
    A pre-tax return on attributed equity of around 19% is
     
    appropriate for a high-quality franchise like ours.
    We
     
    aim
     
    to
     
    get
     
    back
     
    to
     
    this
     
    level
     
    by
     
    capitalizing
     
    on
     
    opportunities
     
    for
     
    growth,
     
    right-sizing
     
    our
     
    cost
     
    base,
     
    and
    optimizing our balance sheet.
    Slide 12 – Supporting clients while growing in strategic
     
    areas
    Starting with our opportunities for growth.
    Switzerland is an economy known for its stability. Growth is modest, but steady and resilient.
     
    Interest rates are
    structurally low and on downward trajectory since
     
    the Swiss National Bank was the first
     
    across developed
    countries to start cutting rates in March.
    Considering these macro factors, we do see opportunities
     
    to expand and grow faster than GDP in areas of
    strategic importance.
    And it starts with making sure all of our clients are aware of the
     
    benefits of the extended offering that is now
    available for them.
     
    8
    Together with our Wealth Management division, we are also focused on growing our business with
    entrepreneurs. No other bank is able to cover the corporate
     
    and private financial needs of these clients
     
    as well
    as we can. And that means no one else
     
    is able to capture the value creation during the lifecycle of
     
    an
    entrepreneur.
    It starts with supporting business founders as
     
    they set up and grow their company by delivering
     
    the whole firm
    to our clients. When the owner at some
     
    point fully or partially sells the enterprise
     
    – usually in an M&A
    transaction or an IPO – we support the Entrepreneur’s transition
     
    to Investor and become their wealth manager.
    As the entrepreneur’s wealth manager, we advise them on how to invest their liquidity. And often we can show
    them private market opportunities to invest
     
    in other entrepreneurs’ businesses, which is where we go full circle.
    Other
     
    areas
     
    where
     
    we
     
    see
     
    growth
     
    opportunities
     
    are
     
    our
     
    leading
     
    affluent
     
    franchise
     
    where
     
    we
     
    can
     
    leverage
    technology even better, asset servicing, retirement planning and sustainable finance.
    Slide 13 – Generating synergies by removing duplications
     
    where necessary
     
    Credit Suisse’s riskier and more capital-intensive business
     
    mix should have translated into a meaningfully
     
    lower
    cost/income ratio compared to UBS, but it didn’t.
     
    Our cost/income ratios have been broadly similar
     
    over the
    years. That means Credit Suisse’s cost efficiency did not compensate
     
    for lower capital efficiency, which led to
    sub-par return on equity.
    Therefore an important lever to return to sustainable levels
     
    of profitability is to reduce costs, painful as they may
    be.
    Credit Suisse had already started this process when we merged.
     
    A comprehensive restructuring plan was in
    place, which we are continuing and accelerating where
     
    possible.
    In addition to that, we are removing duplication across all areas – technology, real estate, branch footprint and
    staff.
    But integrating our operations will require significant investment.
     
    We expect to incur over one and a half billion
    Swiss francs for this purpose, demonstrating
     
    the size of the task at hand.
    On staff reductions, we expect the vast majority to come
     
    from natural attrition, retirements and internal
    mobility. In total and as we said upfront, we expect around 3,000 forced redundancies in Switzerland, of which
    1,000 directly related to the integration of our Swiss
     
    businesses.
    We are committed to minimizing the impact on
     
    employees by treating them fairly, providing them with financial
    support,
     
    outplacement
     
    services,
     
    and
     
    retraining
     
    opportunities.
     
    Our
     
    aim
     
    is
     
    to
     
    enable
     
    those
     
    affected
     
    to
     
    take
    advantage of a
     
    quite-healthy Swiss
     
    job market, where
     
    more open positions
     
    in finance are
     
    available than there
     
    are
    job seekers.
     
     
     
    9
    Slide 14 – Working with our clients to find solutions
     
    in a challenging environment
    Our clients are facing a challenging environment from an economic
     
    and monetary perspective. Interest rates are
    much higher than what our clients have become
     
    used to for more than a decade. And adding
     
    to that pain,
    deposit funding has become scarcer for banks, which
     
    means loans increasingly have to be financed with
     
    more
    expensive capital market funding.
     
    At the same time, export sectors have to deal
     
    with a strong Swiss franc and slow growth in our main export
    markets. The manufacturing PMI is in contraction
     
    territory for the last 18 months, which is longer
     
    than during
    the financial crisis.
    As their partner and house bank, we are helping our
     
    clients navigate the environment. We are doing this
    despite higher liquidity and capital requirements which make
     
    it more expensive to deploy balance sheet. We are
    also facing higher funding costs from having inherited
     
    Credit Suisse’s funding imbalance.
    At the same time, we have to address Credit Suisse’s
     
    over-reliance on lending and inadequate pricing in order
    to remain a beacon of strength for our clients.
    When we merged, Credit Suisse had initiated substantial
     
    balance sheet reductions. Lending exposure was being
    reduced fast, especially in the Real Estate space. With
     
    the added strength of UBS, we can address excessive
    capital intensity in a much smarter and more holistic
     
    way. We can afford
     
    to take a long-term perspective. This
    provides clients with more time and flexibility while we work
     
    towards sustainable profitability levels.
    Our offer to clients is to broaden our relationship where needed. UBS’s
     
    strength is in our holistic approach to
    client relationships. And this is part of our DNA and
     
    valued by clients because they know
     
    they can come to UBS
    for all of their banking needs.
    Where a broader relationship is not a viable option, we have to
     
    find a solution that is best for our client and
     
    for
    the firm – always with the aim to keep the client.
     
    This can include higher prices to compensate
     
    for the risks
    taken by UBS in the form of lending.
    It’s important to highlight that we have always
     
    been very disciplined when it comes to
     
    balance sheet
    deployment at UBS. Regular reviews of economic profitability
     
    across our client relationships – new and existing
    – were always part of that discipline.
    Having these types of client conversations is never easy, but from
     
    my experience, the vast majority of our clients
    understand the rationale.
     
    Slide 15 – Our universal bank in Switzerland will
     
    remain a key pillar of the Group’s strategy
    Going back
     
    to our
     
    universal bank
     
    comprising all
     
    business areas
     
    and clients
     
    in Switzerland,
     
    our commitment to
    our home market is stronger than ever.
    Underpinning this
     
    commitment, we
     
    aim to
     
    maintain our
     
    loan book
     
    in Switzerland
     
    at around
     
    350 billion
     
    Swiss
    francs.
    We want to be the partner of choice for customers
     
    and to support them on all financial matters.
    And we will remain a key pillar of the Swiss financial
     
    center and the Swiss economy overall.
    With that, let’s move to Q&A.
    10
    Fireside Q&A
     
    with Máté
     
    Nemes, UBS
     
    European banking
     
    analyst, and
     
    Sabine Keller-
    Busse, President Switzerland
     
    and Personal & Corporate
     
    Banking
    Máté Nemes
    Good morning from my side as well. My
     
    name is Máté Nemes, I’m the Swiss banking
     
    analyst at UBS. Sabine,
    thank you for the presentation, very comprehensive. There are a few topics
     
    I wanted to discuss a bit more in
    detail with you. I think it’s clear that you’ve
     
    accomplished a lot over a short period
     
    of time. How are you feeling
    about the Group, and specifically about P&C today?
     
    What are the key areas that keep you busy?
    Sabine Keller-Busse
    Well, first of all, I think the integration as we have
     
    progressed today is at the point where we can all be very
    satisfied, having achieved all the milestones
     
    we have set ourselves. So, since the decision
     
    to really integrate the
    Swiss business, we have moved diligently, focused, determined, and as I mentioned,
     
    we have been able to
    really achieve the significantly important milestone
     
    of combining the two legal entities, by merging
     
    the two
    Swiss banks. And that was important because
     
    it has given, for the employees now, really, another step change
    – we are operating as one bank, you have all the employees
     
    of Credit Suisse we could really welcome under the
    UBS roof, working together. Having said that, we are still operating two product lines, so you have
     
    UBS clients
    on UBS products and IT platforms, Credit Suisse clients at
     
    the IT platform. So that is definitely something that
    will keep us busy going forward, ensuring we are preparing for
     
    that migration that is going to happen next
    year.
    Keeping busy, I would say,
     
    obviously keeping close to clients is keeping
     
    us very busy. Competition is very strong
    in Switzerland and for us it’s important to really stay
     
    close to the clients, make sure that all banking
     
    services
    that clients need, because while we are integrating, all
     
    the needs are remaining. So that, we are really staying
    close, being able to fulfil all these services,
     
    and making sure that all clients get that commitment
     
    delivered every
    day. And as I said, so far we have done very, very well, we have been able to stabilize the client franchise, and
    we’ve even been able to attract 30 billion
     
    net new deposits since the acquisition.
     
    We have been able to even
    keep the vast majority of clients, client assets
     
    of those pockets where advisors have left. So a
     
    lot of that keeps
    us busy, and then something which keeps us always busy, but I think more than in the past as well, is what’s
    happening on the technology front. So we see GenAI,
     
    we see innovation moving, and they’re not waiting.
     
    So
    here we are already very busy and focused in really making sure we are staying at
     
    the technological forefront,
    embedding AI solutions in client services, in
     
    supporting our client advisors. So it’s
     
    quite, quite a lot.
    Máté Nemes
    It sounds so. So it is clear, I think, that tremendous effort has been going into the integration.
     
    You’ve achieved
    a lot, be it staff retention, be it expanded offering, be it organizational
     
    alignment. What do you see as the
    biggest challenges today?
    Sabine Keller-Busse
    I would say one of the clearly biggest challenges
     
    is something you haven’t done very often, which
     
    is migrating a
    huge, huge client franchise from one platform to
     
    the other. So, I think this is something we are very focused on
    in preparing. I get a lot of support because we have
     
    so many experts in the firm, so Mike
     
    Dargan on his tech
    department, Michelle Bereaux leading the integration.
     
    So we are all working collectively and ensuring that
     
    this,
    we can really master that challenge and we are well prepared when we go into
     
    the next year.
    11
    Then I would say another challenge is, I’ve mentioned
     
    that we’re now really, I would say,
     
    offering even more to
    our clients, that we are very committed, and our clients
     
    feel it. So we have always been clear to the
    commitment, but nevertheless there is something uncontrollable
     
    out there in the public, which is always
    questioning what we are doing, and if we are doing the right
     
    thing. And I think it is important, and
     
    that is one
    of the reasons I have used this conference as well, to really make sure that it’s
     
    very clear that everybody
    understands our commitment to Switzerland,
     
    to the Swiss economy, but more importantly to all our clients.
    And to really make sure everybody understands we are holding
     
    that commitment, so we are putting money
    where our mouth is, so to speak, by committing this
     
    350 billion of credit to our clients in Switzerland. Which
    we have, I would say, the first time we are getting out with these numbers, but to me it’s
     
    important to, I would
    say, to engage in that debate, and really make crystal clear that we are standing up and want to play
     
    this role in
    Switzerland, it’s important to us.
    Máté Nemes
    That’s very clear, thank you. I wanted to switch gears a little bit and talk about, perhaps,
     
    to another major
    topic, which is an exogenous driver rather than
     
    UBS-specific, and that is interest rates. The Swiss National
     
    Bank
    has been leading the charge globally in terms
     
    of reducing, normalizing policy rates. I wanted
     
    to ask you about
    the impact of lower rates on the Swiss business.
     
    How do you see that going forward?
    Sabine Keller-Busse
    Well, there are different angles if you look at it. So one angle obviously, if rates are lowered, usually this fuels a
    bit the economy, and helps the economy, because lending is better available, and at the same point in time,
    you can see a lot more activity on the investment product side.
     
    And that benefits everybody because being
     
    a
    bank in a, I would say, economically,
     
    thriving economy is helping.
    But obviously as a bank we see it on our net
     
    interest income line as well. So we’ve already given guidance
     
    that
    on a quarterly comparison to the second quarter, for the third quarter we will see a
     
    low single-digit decline,
    which is primarily driven by the second rate cut
     
    happening in June that the SNB did,
     
    the 25 bps, they went
    down. And then we’ve provided some guidance on
     
    comparing last year’s fourth quarter on annualized,
     
    so for
    ’24 we would expect high single-digit impact,
     
    and that means that we need to offset that
     
    to the extent possible
    through generating other income lines.
    But having said that, here it’s beneficial to be part
     
    of a broader Group, because if we are looking at the UBS as
    a Group, and we are part of that Group obviously, we have a very diversified business mix. So if interest rates
    even moving down, we have other parts of
     
    the bank which very much benefit. So in a
     
    way we have a built-in
    hedge being part of the Group.
    Máté Nemes
    Thank you, that makes a lot of sense.
     
    I wanted to touch on another topic, and that
     
    is, the risk environment. I
    think Switzerland, rather uniquely in a global
     
    context, avoided a meaningful, really high spike
     
    in inflation, and
    we have seen a certain benefit from the Swiss franc.
     
    And now we are approaching a point where perhaps the
    disadvantages are starting to outweigh the benefits.
     
    I was wondering if you could talk a little
     
    bit about what
    you are seeing in the portfolio, how the current environment is
     
    impacting the business.
    Sabine Keller-Busse
    I think looking at the Swiss franc, here honestly the
     
    strength of the Swiss franc I’m less worried. And as
     
    we
    were talking about interest rates, perhaps that pressure on the Swiss franc,
     
    that upward pressure gets a bit
    tempered. But looking back, how Swiss corporates have
     
    done over the past periods when the Swiss
     
    franc was
    already very, very high, or very,
     
    very strong, I think there is a high resilience. And I would say to the
     
    broader
    large corporates space, they have learned
     
    to deal with this, they have a trained muscle
     
    on that end.
    12
    What we are seeing more, and this from seeing we’re now having the combined
     
    portfolio, so we will see
    obviously some idiosyncratic situations in a
     
    larger client population on credit losses.
     
    But overall, looking into the
    macroeconomics and seeing what’s happening, for
     
    us relevant export markets – I was mentioning the
    manufacturing purchase index earlier on, which is an
     
    all-time low with growth projections – so that is
    something obviously, for certain industries within the Swiss market, that is something
     
    that needs to be well
    managed and we need to be very well aware of.
     
    So overall, I would say we will remain on an elevated
     
    level, as
    we have seen now, but in a way a normalized form going forward.
    Máté Nemes
    Excellent, so both hands on the wheel. And on that
     
    note, Sabine, I wanted to thank you very much
     
    for your
    presentation and the insightful discussion. It’s
     
    a pleasure to have you here in Wolfsberg.
    And those of you in the room, thank you for joining,
     
    and watching the webcast, thank you for
     
    watching.
    Sabine Keller-Busse
    Thank you. Thank you, Máté.
     
    13
    Cautionary statement
     
    regarding
     
    forward-looking statements
     
    |
     
    This document
    contains statements
     
    that constitute
     
    “forward-looking statements,”
    including but not limited to
     
    management’s outlook for UBS’s
     
    financial performance, statements
     
    relating to the anticipated
     
    effect of transactions and strategic
    initiatives on UBS’s
     
    business and future
     
    development and goals
     
    or intentions to
     
    achieve climate, sustainability
     
    and other social objectives.
     
    While these forward-
    looking statements
     
    represent UBS’s
     
    judgments, expectations and
     
    objectives concerning the
     
    matters described,
     
    a number
     
    of risks,
     
    uncertainties and
     
    other
    important factors could cause actual developments and results to differ materially from UBS’s expectations. In particular, terrorist activity and conflicts in the
    Middle East, as well as the continuing
     
    Russia–Ukraine war, may have significant impacts on
     
    global markets, exacerbate global
     
    inflationary pressures, and slow
    global growth.
     
    In addition,
     
    the ongoing
     
    conflicts may
     
    continue to
     
    cause significant
     
    population displacement, and
     
    lead to
     
    shortages of
     
    vital commodities,
    including energy
     
    shortages and
     
    food insecurity
     
    outside the
     
    areas immediately
     
    involved in
     
    armed conflict. Governmental
     
    responses to
     
    the armed
     
    conflicts,
    including, with respect
     
    to the Russia–Ukraine war,
     
    coordinated successive sets
     
    of sanctions on
     
    Russia and Belarus,
     
    and Russian and
     
    Belarusian entities and
    nationals, and the uncertainty as to
     
    whether the ongoing conflicts will widen and
     
    intensify, may continue
     
    to have significant adverse effects
     
    on the market
    and macroeconomic conditions, including in ways
     
    that cannot be anticipated. UBS’s
     
    acquisition of the Credit Suisse Group has materially
     
    changed its outlook
    and strategic direction
     
    and introduced new
     
    operational challenges. The
     
    integration of the
     
    Credit Suisse
     
    entities into the
     
    UBS structure
     
    is expected to
     
    take
    between three and five
     
    years and presents significant risks,
     
    including the risks that UBS
     
    Group AG may be
     
    unable to achieve the
     
    cost reductions and other
    benefits contemplated by the
     
    transaction. This creates significantly
     
    greater uncertainty about forward-looking
     
    statements. Other factors that
     
    may affect UBS’s
    performance and ability to achieve its plans, outlook and other objectives also include, but are not limited to: (i) the degree to which UBS is successful in the
    execution of
     
    its strategic
     
    plans, including its
     
    cost reduction
     
    and efficiency
     
    initiatives and
     
    its ability
     
    to manage
     
    its levels
     
    of risk-weighted assets
     
    (RWA) and
    leverage ratio denominator (LRD),
     
    liquidity coverage ratio and
     
    other financial resources,
     
    including changes in RWA
     
    assets and liabilities arising
     
    from higher
    market volatility and the size of the combined Group; (ii) the degree to which UBS is successful
     
    in implementing changes to its businesses to meet changing
    market, regulatory and other conditions,
     
    including as a result of the
     
    acquisition of the Credit Suisse
     
    Group; (iii) increased inflation and interest
     
    rate volatility in
    major markets; (iv) developments in the macroeconomic climate
     
    and in the markets in which UBS operates or to which it is exposed, including
     
    movements in
    securities prices
     
    or liquidity,
     
    credit spreads,
     
    currency exchange
     
    rates, deterioration or
     
    slow recovery
     
    in residential
     
    and commercial
     
    real estate
     
    markets, the
    effects of economic
     
    conditions, including
     
    elevated inflationary
     
    pressures, market developments,
     
    increasing geopolitical tensions,
     
    and changes to
     
    national trade
    policies on the financial position
     
    or creditworthiness of UBS’s clients
     
    and counterparties, as well
     
    as on client sentiment and levels
     
    of activity; (v) changes in the
    availability of capital and funding, including
     
    any adverse changes in UBS’s credit spreads and
     
    credit ratings of UBS, Credit Suisse, sovereign issuers,
     
    structured
    credit products or credit-related exposures, as well as
     
    availability and cost of funding to meet requirements for debt eligible for total loss-absorbing capacity
    (TLAC), in particular in light
     
    of the acquisition of the Credit
     
    Suisse Group; (vi) changes in
     
    central bank policies or the
     
    implementation of financial legislation
    and regulation in Switzerland, the
     
    US, the UK, the EU
     
    and other financial centers
     
    that have imposed, or resulted
     
    in, or may do so in
     
    the future, more stringent
    or entity-specific capital, TLAC,
     
    leverage ratio, net stable
     
    funding ratio, liquidity and
     
    funding requirements, heightened operational resilience
     
    requirements,
    incremental tax requirements, additional
     
    levies, limitations on
     
    permitted activities, constraints
     
    on remuneration, constraints
     
    on transfers of capital
     
    and liquidity
    and sharing of operational costs across the Group or other
     
    measures, and the effect these will or would have on UBS’s business
     
    activities; (vii) UBS’s ability to
    successfully implement resolvability and
     
    related regulatory requirements
     
    and the potential
     
    need to make
     
    further changes to
     
    the legal structure
     
    or booking
    model of UBS
     
    in response to
     
    legal and regulatory requirements
     
    and any additional requirements
     
    due to its
     
    acquisition of the Credit
     
    Suisse Group, or
     
    other
    developments; (viii) UBS’s ability to maintain and improve its systems
     
    and controls for complying with sanctions in a timely manner and for
     
    the detection and
    prevention of money laundering to meet evolving
     
    regulatory requirements and expectations, in particular in current
     
    geopolitical turmoil; (ix) the uncertainty
    arising from domestic stresses in certain major economies; (x) changes in
     
    UBS’s competitive position, including whether differences in regulatory capital and
    other requirements among the
     
    major financial centers adversely affect
     
    UBS’s ability to compete in
     
    certain lines of business; (xi)
     
    changes in the standards
     
    of
    conduct applicable to its businesses that may result from new regulations or new enforcement of existing standards, including measures to impose new and
    enhanced duties when interacting
     
    with customers and in
     
    the execution and handling
     
    of customer transactions;
     
    (xii) the liability to which
     
    UBS may be exposed,
    or
     
    possible constraints
     
    or
     
    sanctions that
     
    regulatory authorities
     
    might impose
     
    on UBS,
     
    due to
     
    litigation, contractual
     
    claims and
     
    regulatory investigations,
    including the potential for disqualification from certain businesses,
     
    potentially large fines or monetary penalties, or
     
    the loss of licenses or privileges as a result
    of regulatory or other governmental sanctions, as well as the effect that litigation, regulatory and similar matters have on the operational risk component of
    its RWA, including as a
     
    result of its acquisition
     
    of the Credit Suisse
     
    Group, as well as the
     
    amount of capital available
     
    for return to shareholders;
     
    (xiii) the effects
    on UBS’s business, in
     
    particular cross-border banking, of sanctions,
     
    tax or regulatory developments and
     
    of possible changes in
     
    UBS’s policies and practices;
    (xiv) UBS’s ability
     
    to retain and
     
    attract the
     
    employees necessary
     
    to generate revenues
     
    and to manage,
     
    support and control
     
    its businesses,
     
    which may be
     
    affected
    by competitive factors; (xv) changes in accounting
     
    or tax standards or policies, and determinations or interpretations
     
    affecting the recognition of gain or loss,
    the valuation of goodwill, the recognition of deferred tax assets and other matters; (xvi) UBS’s ability to implement new technologies and business methods,
    including digital services and technologies, and ability
     
    to successfully compete with both existing and new financial
     
    service providers, some of which may not
    be
     
    regulated to
     
    the same
     
    extent; (xvii)
     
    limitations on
     
    the effectiveness
     
    of
     
    UBS’s internal
     
    processes for
     
    risk management,
     
    risk
     
    control, measurement
     
    and
    modeling, and of financial
     
    models generally; (xviii) the
     
    occurrence of operational failures,
     
    such as fraud,
     
    misconduct, unauthorized trading, financial crime,
    cyberattacks, data leakage and systems failures,
     
    the risk of which
     
    is increased with cyberattack threats
     
    from both nation states and
     
    non-nation-state actors
    targeting financial institutions; (xix) restrictions on the ability of UBS Group AG and UBS AG
     
    to make payments or distributions, including due to restrictions
    on the ability of its subsidiaries to make
     
    loans or distributions, directly or indirectly, or, in the case of financial difficulties, due to the exercise by FINMA
     
    or the
    regulators of UBS’s operations in
     
    other countries of their
     
    broad statutory powers in
     
    relation to protective measures, restructuring
     
    and liquidation proceedings;
    (xx) the degree to which changes
     
    in regulation, capital or legal
     
    structure, financial results or other factors
     
    may affect UBS’s ability to maintain
     
    its stated capital
    return objective; (xxi) uncertainty
     
    over the scope of actions
     
    that may be required by UBS,
     
    governments and others
     
    for UBS to achieve goals
     
    relating to climate,
    environmental
     
    and
     
    social
     
    matters,
     
    as
     
    well
     
    as
     
    the
     
    evolving
     
    nature
     
    of
     
    underlying
     
    science
     
    and
     
    industry
     
    and
     
    the
     
    possibility
     
    of
     
    conflict
     
    between
     
    different
    governmental standards
     
    and regulatory regimes;
     
    (xxii) the ability
     
    of UBS to
     
    access capital markets;
     
    (xxiii) the ability
     
    of UBS to
     
    successfully recover from
     
    a disaster
    or other business continuity problem due
     
    to a hurricane, flood, earthquake, terrorist
     
    attack, war,
     
    conflict (e.g., the Russia–Ukraine war), pandemic, security
    breach, cyberattack, power loss, telecommunications failure or other natural or man-made event, including the ability to function
     
    remotely during long-term
    disruptions such as the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic; (xxiv)
     
    the level of success in the
     
    absorption of Credit Suisse, in the
     
    integration of the two groups
    and their businesses, and
     
    in the execution of
     
    the planned strategy regarding
     
    cost reduction and divestment
     
    of any non-core assets,
     
    the existing assets and
    liabilities of Credit Suisse, the level of
     
    resulting impairments and write-downs, the effect of the consummation of the
     
    integration on the operational results,
    share price and credit rating of UBS – delays, difficulties, or failure in closing
     
    the transaction may cause market disruption
     
    and challenges for UBS to maintain
    business, contractual
     
    and operational
     
    relationships; and
     
    (xxv) the
     
    effect that
     
    these or
     
    other factors
     
    or unanticipated
     
    events, including
     
    media reports
     
    and
    speculations, may have on
     
    its reputation and
     
    the additional consequences that this
     
    may have on
     
    its business and performance. The
     
    sequence in which the
    factors above are presented is not indicative of their likelihood of occurrence or the potential magnitude of their consequences. UBS’s business and financial
    performance could be affected by other factors identified in its past and future filings and reports, including those filed with the US Securities and Exchange
    Commission (the SEC).
     
    More detailed information
     
    about those
     
    factors is
     
    set forth
     
    in documents furnished
     
    by UBS
     
    and filings
     
    made by
     
    UBS with
     
    the SEC,
    including the UBS
     
    Group AG and
     
    UBS AG Annual
     
    Reports on Form
     
    20- F for
     
    the year ended
     
    31 December 2023.
     
    UBS is not
     
    under any obligation
     
    to (and
    expressly disclaims any obligation to) update or
     
    alter its forward-looking statements, whether as
     
    a result of new information, future events, or otherwise.
     
     
     
     
     
    SIGNATURES
    Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the
     
    registrant has duly caused this
    report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
    UBS Group AG
     
    By: _/s/ David Kelly______________
    Name:
     
    David Kelly
    Title:
     
    Managing Director
    By: _/s/ Ella Campi_______________
    Name:
     
    Ella Campi
    Title:
     
    Executive Director
     
    UBS AG
    By: _/s/ David Kelly______________
    Name:
     
    David Kelly
     
    Title:
     
    Managing Director
    By: _/s/ Ella Campi_______________
    Name:
     
    Ella Campi
    Title:
     
    Executive Director
    Date:
     
    September 11, 2024
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