UBS to start Credit Suisse Asia investment banking job cuts in July
-sources
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[June 21, 2023] By
Kane Wu and Selena Li
HONG KONG (Reuters) - UBS will start cutting Asia investment banking
jobs at Credit Suisse next month, three people with knowledge of the
matter said, as the banks move towards integrating businesses.
UBS completed its emergency takeover of embattled rival Credit Suisse
last week, forging a Swiss banking and wealth management giant with a
$1.6 trillion balance sheet and a workforce of 120,000.
In the Asia Pacific region, there will be significant reduction in
Credit Suisse investment bankers covering Australia and China, where the
two banks overlap most, two of the sources said.
UBS is also looking to axe most of Credit Suisse's Asia consumer and
retail and general industrial group coverage teams, the two sources
said.
Most of the Credit Suisse technology, media and telecoms team's
investment bankers will be retained, the three sources said, with one
adding that dealmakers covering non-China financial institutions are
also likely to be retained.
UBS informed staff about the looming cuts on Tuesday, the first two
sources said. It was not immediately clear how many jobs will be axed in
total.
All the sources declined to be named because they were not authorised to
speak to the media.
Both UBS and Credit Suisse declined to comment.
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A pedestrian walks past a logo of Credit
Suisse outside its office building in Hong Kong, China March 21,
2023. REUTERS/Lam Yik
Reuters this month reported that UBS was looking to retain more than
100 Credit Suisse investment bankers in Asia and was in advanced
discussions to keep dozens of senior dealmakers in countries
including South Korea, Thailand, Vietnam and India.
The bulk of Credit Suisse investment bankers in Southeast Asia have
left, said one of the three sources and a fourth person with
knowledge of the matter.
The priority for UBS now is to have its new regional leadership look
at Credit Suisse's book and client list because the risk profiles of
the two banks' clients are very different, said a fifth source with
knoweledge of UBS plans.
Former Credit Suisse bankers in Asia are still operating
independently from their new UBS colleagues and working on live
deals, mandates and new pitches on their own, said one of the first
three sources and the fifth person.
(Reporting by Kane Wu and Selena Li in Hong Kong; Additional
reporting by Yantoultra Ngui in Singapore; Editing by David Goodman)
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