UBS Leaving Switzerland is Edging Closer to Reality

Money can’t buy you love and right now no one knows that better than UBS Group AG. Since the Swiss bank helpfully rescued its cockroach-riddled rival Credit Suisse in a state-brokered emergency takeover, its reward has been government plans to whack it with punishing new capital rules and a lagging stock price.

On top of that, other misfortunes are piling up. Losses from the bankruptcy of autos-supplier First Brands hit its hedge fund arm and a court denied its efforts to recover money linked to the earlier failure of Greensill Capital. Yet the worst threats come from the Swiss regulatory overhaul and another court ruling that could reverse the writedown of $16.5 billion of Credit Suisse bonds.

No matter how well its operations perform or how much it pays out in buybacks and dividends, UBS shares will struggle until this is all fixed. Unless its home country can clean up the mess left behind by its solution to the Credit Suisse crisis, and compromise on its fear of ever allowing a repeat at UBS, the bank will face major changes in its profitability and the very shape of the business.

One important investor says the bank’s only option is to leave Switzerland. If nothing alters soon, this radical idea may become realistic.

Let’s enumerate UBS’s woes. It has about $500 million in exposure to First Brands, which collapsed in September. Slightly more than a fifth of that is in the bank’s O’Connor hedge fund unit, which UBS agreed to sell to Cantor Fitzgerald in May. That deal might need to be renegotiated, Bloomberg News has reported. UBS hasn’t commented and should update investors at quarterly results this week. All told, it’s an additional pain.

Also this month, UBS lost a London lawsuit against SoftBank Group Corp. where it was trying to recoup up to $440 million related to former Credit Suisse funds that bought the debt of infamous trade-finance firm Greensill. UBS has taken charges for compensating investors in those funds already, but getting some of that back would have been nice.

European BB graph

Another case this month worries investors more. The Swiss Federal Administrative Court ruled that the Swiss government’s decision to write off junior Credit Suisse bonds to ease its sale to UBS was unlawful. Claimants hope they could get back some of the nearly $17 billion of losses they suffered, although how that might happen is unclear right now.