Friday, June 26, 2009

UBS Raises $3.5 Billion in Share Sale, Expects Quarterly Loss

UBS Raises $3.5 Billion in Share Sale, Expects Quarterly Loss


June 26 (Bloomberg) -- UBS AG, the European bank with the biggest credit-crisis losses, raised about 3.8 billion Swiss francs ($3.5 billion) by selling shares to boost capital and said it expects a second-quarter loss.

The bank sold 293.3 million shares for 13 francs apiece to a “small number of institutional investors,” the Zurich-based company said late yesterday. UBS shares closed at 13.97 francs in Zurich trading.

The capital increase is aimed at boosting confidence in the bank, UBS said after reporting renewed withdrawals of client funds from all of its money-managing divisions in the second quarter. Switzerland’s central bank said last week the bank needs to further increase capital and cut assets to meet stricter requirements.

“The capital raise is consistent with what we’ve seen from other banks,” said William Fitzpatrick, a financial-industry analyst at Optique Capital Management in Milwaukee, which manages $900 million and doesn’t hold UBS stock. “The loss is a surprise to me. Market conditions have been very favorable for the investment banks in the second quarter.”

The bank said the second-quarter loss is mostly tied to reorganization costs and charges on the company’s own debt, while operating earnings improved from the first quarter on improved market conditions. The bank is scheduled to publish detailed second-quarter earnings on Aug. 4.

Banks Raise Cash

In the U.S., lenders including Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. have raised more than $75 billion by selling shares or converting preferred stock into common shares since early May, when regulators demanded some of the banks bolster their capital.

The Swiss National Bank said last week that UBS and smaller rival Credit Suisse Group AG need to increase the amount of capital they hold in relation to assets to withstand any further losses. The banks should aim for a leverage ratio of at least 5 percent once the crisis is over, the SNB said. UBS’s ratio was 2.56 percent at the end of March.

UBS has amassed more than $53 billion in writedowns and losses since the credit crisis began and had to raise about $34 billion before this announcement from investors including the Swiss government to replenish capital.

UBS’s so-called Tier 1 capital ratio will rise to more than 11.9 percent at the end of this month from 10.5 percent at the end of March because of the share sale and a reduction in risk- weighted assets, the bank said. An increase of about 50 basis points through the sale of Brazil’s Pactual unit will probably come in the third quarter, it added.

UBS also said the Swiss government, which holds 6 billion francs in notes it can convert into UBS shares, agreed not to sell any stock without the bank’s consent until Aug. 4.

BLOOMBERG.COM

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