UBS expects further growth from a rising Asia
UBS, the world's largest wealth manager, is already seeing how long it would take for it to hit US$3 billion in earnings from its Asia-Pacific operations, with full-year earnings due to easily hit US$2 billion by the end of 2020.
Calling it a "purposeful" target without a timeline, UBS Asia-Pacific president Edmund Koh said in a media briefing on Wednesday that the results points to the strong organic growth from a rising Asia.
UBS in the Asia-Pacific posted a 92 per cent jump in nine-month profit before tax from a year ago to US$1.8 billion. Assets under management in the global wealth-management segment cracked the US$500-billion mark.
Asia is now the largest regional contributor to group profit at UBS. As it is, the bank's Asia wealth franchise has aimed to close the current financial year on an all-time record.
Mr Koh noted that in speaking with clients, large businesses from this part of the world have been advised to plan for a new normal in a post-Covid world. "It will be a new, different world by quarter one next year," he said, noting that clients are advised to be less preoccupied over their "pre-Covid numbers".
He noted that some capex-driven industries - including those in hospitality - would need more time to recover; those in industries such as healthcare and tech will grow strongly. Meanwhile, wealth-management clients are also keeping their powder dry ahead of the US elections.
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Mr Koh said as well that he has not seen any significant fund movements to Singapore, despite the tensions in Hong Kong. "I don't see any outflow from Hong Kong coming to Singapore," he said. So while there has been a slight slowdown in net new money in Hong Kong, these flows have not been picked up in Singapore as inflows.
The record third-quarter profit from this region was driven by a 24 per cent lift in operating income in the global wealth-management segment at US$705 million, with the percentage growth outpacing all other regions.
Cost-to-income ratio for the Asian global wealth-management operations stood at 63 per cent, the second-lowest after that of Switzerland at 62 per cent. Year-to-date net credit loss expenses have been "immaterial", the bank said.
Overall, UBS posted this week a 99 per cent jump in third-quarter profit. Net profit hit US$2.1 billion for the three months ended Sept 30, which beat expectations for US$1.56 billion, a Reuters report said.
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