UBS $UBS rises 5% as Q1 net profit jumps 80% to $3B
Original: UBS profits rocket 80% to $3 billion for first quarter beat, shares pop 5% View original →
UBS $UBS rose 5% after first-quarter net profit jumped 80% year on year to $3.0 billion, beating the $2.8 billion analyst consensus and giving the bank room to stay aggressive on buybacks even as Swiss regulators push for thicker capital buffers. For a stock that has spent the post-Credit Suisse period trading on integration execution and capital policy, both numbers mattered.
The official UBS first-quarter results said the group generated $3.0 billion of net profit with a 16.8% return on CET1. UBS also reported a 14.7% CET1 capital ratio and said it had already repurchased $0.9 billion of stock in the quarter, keeping it on track to buy back $3 billion by the time it reports second-quarter results. CNBC added that underlying profit before tax came in at $3.9 billion, above the $3.2 billion analyst estimate compiled by LSEG.
Flows backed up the headline beat. UBS said global wealth management brought in $37 billion of net new assets, while asset management collected more than $14 billion of net new money. CEO Sergio Ermotti told CNBC it was a "very strong quarter," pointing to double-digit profitability growth across businesses and better activity in equity capital markets and alternatives.
The quality of the beat was not perfect. CNBC reported UBS expects second-quarter net interest income across wealth management and personal and corporate banking to be broadly flat. Switzerland's government is also proposing rules that could force the bank to hold about $20 billion of additional capital to reduce the risk of another Credit Suisse-style failure. Investors are still balancing earnings momentum against a regulatory regime that may become structurally more expensive.
The next watchpoint is whether client activity, flows, and capital return can keep outpacing the drag from lower net interest income and higher capital demands. If UBS can keep printing profits near this level while completing integration by year-end, the market will spend less time debating legacy risk and more time debating how much excess capital can still come back to shareholders.
Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.
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