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UBS staff costs were lower overall during the quarter but the hotly debated bonuses to traders and advisers increased. Shareholders had lined up at the bank's annual meeting last month to criticize the massive bonuses paid to senior executives, though a majority voted in favor of the board's compensation proposal. The bank's outlook for the second quarter was positive, with chief executive Oswald Gruebel stating that UBS was "well positioned to meet our medium-term goals." But it warned that markets might stumble over concerns about the ability of Greece and other European countries to repay substantial debts. UBS itself has no significant exposure to Greek, Spanish or Portuguese debt, Cryan stressed. "We're sleeping very well at night in relation to sovereign debt throughout Europe," he said. Cryan also said the bank was doing "absolutely everything we can" to resolve its long-running dispute with U.S. tax authorities. The bank has agreed to turn over some 4,450 names of wealthy Americans suspected of dodging taxes through secret UBS accounts, but that agreement is being held up by the Swiss courts and parliamentarians wary of signing away the country's storied tradition of banking secrecy. UBS said it expects to meet new rules announced last month by Switzerland's financial regulator FINMA requiring major banks to hold enough cash and high-quality assets to be able to withstand a crisis for at least 30 days. The new rules come into effect June 30.
[Associated
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