About Financial Services Industry

The financial industry meltdown has been the worst since the great depression. BNET Financial provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives about the major financial services companies in the banking and finance sector. In addition to detailed company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new mergers, partnerships, financial products, rates, investments, capital, and a host of other critical factors of success in the finance business.

Private Wealth Roundup: UBS May Be Gearing Up For Sale In Wake Of Tax Scandal And Broker Exodus

By Daniel M. Harrison | Oct 9, 2009

As UBS faces an exodus of its advisors to rival firms in the wake of a recent multi-billion dollar tax evasion scandal, the firm may be gearing up to sell its private wealth division to a U.S. bank. The move would bring Switzerland’s traditionally secretive private banking industry one step closer to extinction.

Reuter’s reports that former Merrill Lynch banker Robert McCann is a favorite to head up UBS’s American wealth management division. The hiring, some market participants argue, is a step towards strategically turning UBS’s wealth management unit into an attractive acquisition target for a rival bank.

“There were rumors already some time ago that the current head of the business would be replaced in the context of the whole strategic positioning,” Rainer Skierka, an analyst at Bank Sarasin told Reuters. “You can also hire somebody to sell the business,” he added.

Others were more direct: “We believe that they are trying to sell it. Maybe they need a new man to do it,” Helvea analyst Peter Thorne told the wire.

UBS has been struggling lately in the wake of a giant tax-evasion scandal, which culminated in the firm turning over 4,450 names of American clients involved in illegal offshore tax schemes, and disastrously, placing the whistleblower in jail for 40 months.

As a result, the firm has lost around 90 of its top brokers, more than half of which defected to rival firms as their business faced being tarnished by the bad publicity. Brokers more commonly leave big banks in order to go it alone rather than to other similar firms. For instance, most of Wells Fargo’s departing brokers went solo last month, while not even a third of those leaving Smith Barney transferred to another big bank, despite the recent acquisition by Morgan Stanley.

“Clearly UBS has lost a lot of ground to its prime competitors,” Alois Pirker, a research director at Aite Group, told The Wall Street Journal.

Daniel M. Harrison has written for the Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones Newswires, and Forbes.com. In 2007, he initiated Asian market coverage for TheStreet.com; he's also served as Opening Bell editor at Dealbreaker.com and writes The Global Perspective blog.

Follow him on Twitter.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Rio blames Chinalco talk for share plunge

    South China Morning Post - 230 days 18 hours 43 minutes ago

    Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto on Wednesday reaffirmed its commitment to a multi-billion dollar tie-up with mainland's Chinalco, and blamed media speculation for a recent share price plunge

  • Giant clash

    BBC - 160 days 18 hours 16 minutes ago

    A long-running corporate battle for a multi-billion dollar military contract that could unseat Boeing from its top spot in US aerospace has stubbornly bounced back to dominate the defence industry. The stalking horse is defence behemoth Northrop Grumman, which together with Boeing's European arch rival EADS has devised a plot to wrestle from...

  • Banks tempt thin-trade investors

    Financial Times - 108 days 23 hours 53 minutes ago

    European equities hit a fresh high for the year this week as upbeat news tempted investors to buy up banking shares amid holiday-thinned trading levels. UBS, one of the lenders most damaged during the credit crunch by its exposure to toxic assets, ended higher for the week following news it would not be fined in the settlement of its tax evasion...

  • The Swiss Question Their Once Proud Banks

    Time - 264 days 7 hours 43 minutes ago

    Swiss banking giant UBS takes its name from the first initials of the company's original moniker Union Bank of Switzerland. But over the past few months the Swiss have begun to joke that the acronym should stand for United Bandits of Switzerland. Fury over a tax scandal and massive losses thanks to UBS's exposure to the toxic subprime market in...

  • AIG plans $5bn IPO for Asian arm

    Financial Times - 190 days 20 hours 32 minutes ago

    American International Group is this week expected formally to unveil plans for a multi-billion dollar initial public offering of its Asian life insurance operations. People familiar with the matter said that an official announcement could come as early as Monday. Depending on market conditions, the IPO of American International Assurance is...

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement