UBS CEO Ermotti says it will take months for new banking rules

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Ermotti UBS Group CEO attends the Building Bridges conference in Geneva

Sergio Ermotti, UBS Group Chief Executive Officer attends the Building Bridges conference in Geneva, Switzerland, October 2, 2023. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo Acquire Licensing Rights

LONDON/ZURICH, Nov 7 (Reuters) – UBS Group (UBSG.S) chief executive Sergio Ermotti said it will take months before Switzerland adopts new banking rules to help prevent bank runs and that he did not expect them to put the country at a disadvantage compared to other jurisdictions.

Ermotti was asked about proposed new measures to prevent future banks runs, which might include some limits on withdrawals and imposing fees on exits, as reported by Reuters last week.

“I’m convinced that Switzerland will keep its standards,” Ermotti said. “I don’t see us being particularly disadvantaged compared to any other jurisdictions in terms of liquidity ordinance,” he told analysts while presenting the bank’s third-quarter results.

“We will follow up, and I think it’s going to still take months and months before the full analysis of what happened will translate into concrete actions,” he said, adding it was hard to track all ideas reported in the media.

“Our speculation… I don’t believe this is going to be part of the package,” responding to a question about the too-big-to-fail review that will be presented in the spring. “At this stage… even the finance minister took an official stance on the matter.”

Reuters reported that one option being discussed is staggering a greater portion of withdrawals over longer periods of time, citing a person familiar with the matter.

However, Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter told Bloomberg on Friday such measure was not being considered as part of Switzerland’s review of its financial regulation.

Asked about how UBS may be addressing the task of making deposits less fickle, Chief Financial Officer Todd Tuckner told reporters that “clients will rotate into fixed-term preferred deposits and in that sense they are stickier over the term – in general the relationships are developed over many, many years and last many, many years.”

Reporting by Stefania Spezzati, Noele Illien and Oliver Hirt; Editing by Elisa Martinuzzi and Tomasz Janowski

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Stefania is an award-winning reporter who covers European banking at Reuters. Based in London, she chronicles all things finance, breaks news and digs deep into the world’s biggest banks. Born in Puglia, Italy, Stefania started working as a financial journalist in Milan for MF-DowJones, a newswire backed by Dow Jones and Milano Finanza. Prior to joining Reuters, Stefania spent about a decade at Bloomberg News, in Milan and London. In 2022, she co-led an investigation which through data journalism exposed how over 130 million pounds in taxpayer-backed loans went to firms with dubious credentials. The story won at the British Journalism Awards in crime and legal affairs journalism.
Contact: +44 7500 684790

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