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UBS Agrees to Buy Back Auction-Rate Securities
Tom Burroughes
11 August 2008
UBS has agreed to buy back a total of $18.6 billion of auction-rate securities it had sold to investors as well as pay a total fine of $150 million to
In an agreement with the New York Attorney General, the
The announcement was in addition to the firm’s recently announced intention to repurchase $3.5 billion of tax-exempt Auction Preferred Stock. A number of large banking groups, including Citi, Merrill Lynch and Credit Suisse, have become embroiled in the saga of auction-rate securities, which are bonds or preferred shares whose interest rates are reset by period bidding run by dealers. Some banks allegedly abandoned their routine role as buyers of last resort for the debt in mid-February as demand dried up, allowing the market to collapse and leaving investors stuck with what had been pitched to them as money-market-like instruments. In the case of UBS, the debt sale scandal comes on top of the problems it has faced in the wake of $38 billion of write-downs connected to the global credit crunch.