Financial Results
UBS Says On Track To Complete Credit Suisse Integration By End-2026

The bank issued an upbeat, if measured, tone in its annual report for 2025, with senior figures again stressing that Swiss authorities should not overstep in laying down new capital requirements.
Yesterday, UBS said it
is on track to “substantially” complete the integration of
Credit Suisse at the end of this year. The CEO and chairman of
Switzerland’s largest bank also repeated that the country needs
to avoid unduly heavy capital rules.
In a letter to shareholders as part of the Zurich-listed bank’s
annual report, CEO Sergio Ermotti (main picture) and Colm
Kelleher, board chairman, said that during 2025, UBS achieved
milestones including migrating most client accounts from Credit
Suisse.
Three years ago this month, UBS acquired Credit Suisse in an
emergency deal supported by the Swiss federal government after
the latter bank was hit by a raft of scandals and missteps. The
takeover revived concerns about the “too-big-to-fail” problem
that bank “shotgun marriages” pose for the stability of the
financial system. Switzerland now has only one universal bank.
Raising memories of the 2008 financial crash, the Credit Suisse
rescue highlighted how stricken banks pose a potential charge
on taxpayers without measures being put in place. The UBS
takeover, made at the behest of the Swiss authorities,
was one of the largest M&A deals of its kind in years.
As part of the process, holders of Additional Tier 1 bonds issued
by Credit Suisse were wiped out, triggering lawsuits.
Ermotti and colleagues have locked
horns with policymakers in Berne about mooted capital
requirements that UBS fears could threaten the bank’s competitive
edge.
Results last year gave cause for cheer: UBS logged a 53 per cent
year-on-year net profit, attributable to shareholders, of $7.77
billion. However, share price performance so far in 2026 has
shown a 22.4 per cent fall, along with declines in a number of
other banks hit by the flight from risk amidst the upsurge of
military conflict in the Middle East. Shares in JP Morgan are
down 12.3 per cent since the start of 2026; shares in Deutsche
Bank are down almost 21 per cent, for example.
Capital pushback
While saluting progress made, the two senior figures reiterated
Switzerland’s need to avoid over-onerous capital rules.
“Robust oversight is essential for a healthy financial centre. At
the same time, all parties agree that any regulatory amendments
must be targeted, proportionate and internationally aligned.
Experience shows that past idiosyncratic crises in the banking
sector mostly stemmed from poor business strategy and risk
management, not from insufficient capital requirements,” they
wrote. “By granting substantial regulatory concessions and not
publicly communicating early on about Credit Suisse’s weaknesses,
the Swiss authorities enabled Credit Suisse to muddle through and
avoid the market’s discipline, forestalling timely action to
adjust its business model.
“With the integration of Credit Suisse, we are creating an even
more resilient firm, not only for our shareholders, clients and
employees, but for all stakeholders and the whole of Switzerland.
Protecting and expanding Switzerland’s competitiveness is an
obligation shared by both political and economic spheres,” they
wrote.
Kelleher and Ermotti said UBS transitioned all client accounts
booked outside Switzerland and 85 per cent of those booked in
Switzerland to UBS platforms, and it is on track to carry
out the remaining client transfers by the end of March.
UBS also wrapped up its integration of asset management,
including the final portfolio migrations onto UBS platforms.
Costs
“After delivering further efficiency improvements, we exceeded
our cost-reduction targets, with cumulative gross cost savings
reaching $10.7 billion in 2025, above our guidance of around $10
billion. This reflects our progress in decommissioning legacy
technology applications and infrastructure, and in simplifying
our legal entity structure. We identified an additional $500
million of incremental gross cost savings, taking the planned
cumulative total to $13.5 billion by the end of 2026.”
The duo said UBS’s non-core and legacy unit linked to the Credit
Suisse takeover continued to “wind down non-strategic positions
and reduce exposures.”
Since it was set up in 2023, NCL has freed up $8 billion of
capital and reduced its risk-weighted assets by two-thirds and
its underlying operating costs by around 80 per cent
compared with the full-year 2022 baseline. UBS said
it exited the costliest debt inherited from Credit Suisse,
which was issued at distressed spreads prior to the acquisition
of 2023. UBS also resolved several outstanding legacy litigation
matters.
Executive compensation
UBS kept Ermotti's total compensation steady at SFr14.9 million
($19 million). His salary is composed of a fixed part of SFr2.8
million and a variable part of SFr12.1 million, reports said. In
total, the board of directors received total remuneration of
SFr145.3 million for 2025, little changed from 2024, media
reports said.
Significant shareholdings
The report noted that figures filed with UBS and the SIX Swiss
Exchange on 31 December 2025, the following entities held more
than 3 per cent of the voting rights on the bank: Norges Bank
(Norway), which disclosed a 4.90 per cent stake on 22 January
2025; and BlackRock (US), which disclosed a 5.01 per cent holding
on 30 November 2023. UBS employees held at least 6.94 per cent of
UBS shares outstanding.