Do More With Reuters
Partner Services

UBS axes 5,500 jobs as it sells down subprime

Tue May 6, 2008 10:39pm IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

By Thomas Atkins

ZURICH (Reuters) - UBS said it would axe 5,500 jobs and sell billions of dollars of ailing assets in a bid to break free from the subprime crisis.

The job cuts, coming on top of 1,500 already completed, will reduce the Swiss bank's workforce by an additional 7 percent.

Most of cuts will hit U.S. and UK investment banking as it hacks back the business lines that made it Europe's biggest casualty of the subprime crisis.

"In terms of large-scale reductions, I do not forsee anything (but) you will never have certainty that we are done," Finance Chief Marco Suter told Reuters after the announcement on Tuesday.

"In the investment bank, that's just the name of the game: hire and fire."

UBS unveiled a preliminary deal with U.S. asset manager BlackRock Inc to sell for $15 billion a portfolio of subprime mortgages with a face value of $22 billion.

The bank said the sale was a signal the market for ailing U.S. real-estate loans is recovering.

Shares in the world's largest wealth manager fell as much as 5 percent as investors worried the crisis had ravaged UBS earnings power, shown by a sharp slowdown in new money entrusted to it by its large base of rich clients.  Continued...

Dubai Debt Fears

Villas are seen on the The Palm, Jumeirah, with Atlantis, The Palm, under construction on the breakwater (crescent), May 3, 2008.  REUTERS/Jumana El Heloueh

Banks outside the Gulf played down their exposure to Dubai debt, after fears the emirate could default and even derail world economic recovery prompted a sell-off in global markets.  Full Article | Slideshow 

Photo
A man walks with the Indian national flag in front of the Taj Mahal hotel, one of the sites of last year's militant attacks, in Mumbai November 26, 2009.  REUTERS/Punit Paranjpe
One Year Later

Mumbai held tearful memorials as it marked the first anniversary of militant raids that killed 166 people.   Full Article | Full Coverage