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A Swiss court ruling last month put on hold a carefully crafted agreement between the U.S. and Swiss governments to end a legal case against UBS in return for the handover of thousands of customer files to U.S. tax authorities. "We are, as we have been, fulfilling our obligations under our part of the bargain," Chief Financial Officer John Cryan said, but added that UBS isn't taking direct part in the talks to save the U.S.-Swiss deal. "I'm afraid we are playing unfortunately a rather passive role, which is never very comfortable, but it's the situation we're in," he said in a conference call. Cryan played down the impact of the U.S. tax case on client confidence, insisting that customers were more interested in the bank's financial bottom line than in its legal tussles. "Now that we are (profitable) the reasons for clients not to want to bring money back to the bank have gone away," he said. All of the Zurich-based bank's four business units made a pretax profit during the quarter, including its closely watched investment bank, which recorded a profit of 297 million francs. The investment bank was responsible for the majority of UBS's massive losses during the credit crisis, leading some in Switzerland to call for it to be spun off or sold. UBS said it expects the investment bank's performance to further improve in 2010. The bank is proposing no dividend to its shareholders.
[Associated
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