"Of
course, I will abstain to talk about UBS," Ermotti said at the
virtual Bank of America Merrill Lynch Annual Financials CEO
Conference.
"But...you heard me say, particularly in the last year or two
years, I felt the debate in Europe was too focused on 'too big
to fail', and rather should have been 'too small to survive, to
small to compete.' Now, I think, already since late (2019), and
since COVID, things are crystal clear. As I mentioned a few
quarters ago, the train left the station in that sense, and
consolidation is inevitable."
Ermotti, due to be replaced by former ING head Ralph Hamers in
November, said regulators had been vocal in the last few months
about their openness to consolidation that made sense, adding
they were right to oppose deals that did not add value.
Reports that UBS has examined a potential tie-up with rival
Credit Suisse have put it in the spotlight of late.
At the same conference on Tuesday, the head of Credit Suisse
said he also expected to see more deals.
Ermotti said that while consolidation would be good for the
market, deals needed to be sensible.
"Scale per se means nothing. You need to have focused scale,
complementary scale, where you create added value," he said.
(Reporting by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi; Editing by Michael
Shields)
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