UBS: Twisting in the Wind

ShenGuang
01-24

After the takeover of Credit Suisse following its near collapse in 2023, historic fellow Swiss bank UBS ( $UBS Group AG(UBS)$) now possesses assets that are 2.5 times that of its homeland Switzerland’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Given its new size and increased access to clients through Credit Suisse’s network, it’s entirely logical to assume that this will prove to be a boost to the company’s stock.

Shortly after the takeover was approved by regulators and announced on the 19th of March 2023, the company’s stock steadily extended gains over both the meandering Nasdaq Financial-100 index (IXF) as well as the broad market S&P 500 ($S&P 500(.SPX)$ or $SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust(SPY)$). Since January of last year till the present, the company has accrued substantial outperformance relative to both indices.

However, the bank also inherited Credit Suisse’s liabilities as well. As of its last released quarterly update (dated as of end of September 2023), the company’s total revenues for the year are nearly matched by the goodwill impairment from the acquisition.

While revenues did see a 12% growth in year-on-year (YoY) terms, operating expenses and personnel count witnessed a 45% and 61% growth respectively. In terms of tangible book value of the stock, however, it has witnessed a nearly 50% growth after the acquisition. However, to stave off continuing high costs, it has its work cut out.

With regard to risky assets, UBS has been hard at work with some decidedly uncertain outcomes. A plan to liquidate its $250 million distressed-debt business failed last year. The bank is now attempting to sell off these assets individually.

Personnel count is a key concern for investment banks: good talent traditionally is hard to find, almost never cheap and accounts for a massive chunk of expenses. However, given that both UBS and Credit Suisse often competed in the same markets, there are bound to be post-acquisition redundancies. It’s looking to terminate thousands of roles inherited as a result of the acquisition, from the managing director level down. The layoffs would be driven by cost-cutting considerations as opposed to on the basis of performance. Meanwhile, it’s struggling to offload the investment banking franchise it inherited from Credit Suisse in China, given geopolitical risks and a tough growth outlook forecasted in China’s economy. UBS’ offloading effort (find a buyer) is likely going to be complicated by the fact that nearly all prominent banks are cutting personnel in China and engaged in cost-cutting exercises around the world.

One of the reasons why financial services stocks have traditionally been favoured when recessionary outlook is grim is because high rates tend to translate to higher revenues and increased demand for fixed-income products – a forte for investment banks. Another factor that favours banks is that they have traditionally never been shy about engaging in resolute cost-cutting programs. In effect, they tend to attain cost efficiencies quite rapidly, thus creating substantial tailwinds for investor preference.

The headwind for UBS, however, has been that its explosive capture of market share via the collapse of Credit Suisse has come with costs it’s currently struggling to rationalize. Until the publication of its fourth quarter 2023 results on the 6th of February, the stock can be expected to be volatile. For tactical investors, there’s ample potential to consider trading opportunities via UBS3 – which provides a daily-rebalanced 3X exposure to the upside of the stock – or UB3S, which does the same on the downside. Over the course of the next week or so, a combination of these two ETPs might prove to have some interesting payoff potential.

For broader articles that deep-dives into business and culture in Asia, visit asianomics.substack.com. Recent articles include an examination of rising numbers of Chinese residents buying homes in the U.S. made for Fox Business, a summary of key trends in EVs and AIs in the wake of Big Tech’s Q3 earnings releases made for Reuters, and an outline of stablecoins’ potential to transform the global FX market made for CoinDesk.

Q4 Earnings Season Coming! What's Your Take?
The fourth-quarter financial results have commenced, and four out of the six major banks on Wall Street have reported less than optimistic outcomes. A higher number and percentage of S&P 500 companies have issued negative earnings per share (EPS) guidance for Q4 compared to both the 5-year and 10-year averages. ----------------------- Share your insights about Q4 earnings season to win tiger coins!
Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

Comments

  • sadsam
    01-25
    sadsam
    👏 Brilliant analysis! 👌
Leave a comment
1
2