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UBS reports 1Q net loss $11 billion



By Ernst E. Abegg, AP
06 May 2008 @ 07:35 am EST

ZURICH, Switzerland - Swiss bank UBS, hard hit by the U.S. subprime crisis, reported a first-quarter loss of $10.97 billion and said Tuesday it will slash almost 7 percent of its work force.


Switzerland UBS
A Jan. 24, 2008 file photo shows the logo of Switzerland`s UBS bank above the entrance to the headquarters in Zurich, Switzerland. Swiss bank UBS AG reported a net loss Tuesday, May 6, 2008 of 11.5 billion Swiss francs (US$10.97 billion; euro 7.1 billion) for the first quarter of this year and announced 5,500 job cuts. This compares with a net profit of 3 billion Swiss francs in the same period last year. The losses translate to 5.63 Swiss francs...
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The 11.5 billion Swiss franc loss compares with a net profit of 3 billion francs in the same period last year. The company also said it would unload $15 billion in subprime and other mortgage-based securities from its portfolio.

UBS AG shares tumbled 4.9 percent to 35.06 francs ($33.40).

The bank warned investors last month to expect net losses of $11.42 billion from the first three months of the year after writing down about $19 billion on U.S. real estate and related credit positions.

Switzerland's largest bank said it will cut 2,600 jobs in its investment banking arm -which took the blame for most of UBS' record $37.4 billion in write-downs since last summer. Most of the job cuts will be in Britain and the U.S., the bank said.

UBS will trim another 2,900 jobs across the company, mostly through attrition, bringing the total number of posts cut by mid-2009 to 5,500 overall. UBS has more than 83,800 employees worldwide.

UBS has struggled to regain investor confidence since a string of heavy losses prompted shareholders to demand radical changes at the traditionally staid bank.

Shareholders last month voted in a new chairman and a capital increase of 15 billion francs ($14.9 billion) to distance UBS from historic losses. Earlier this year, UBS raised 13 billion francs after seeking help from a Singapore government fund and an unidentified Middle East investor.

UBS said Tuesday it has reduced its exposure to subprime-related assets by 60 percent since the third quarter of 2007.

"We can see tangible effects as a result of our initial responses to the losses," CEO Marcel Rohner said in a statement. "While our exposure is still subject to swings in market conditions, we see market demand for these securities returning in certain areas and at the current level of valuations."

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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