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UBS shares slide despite soaring profits for 2015

Swiss banking giant UBS on Tuesday posted a 79-percent higher net profit for 2015, beating analyst expectations, with tax benefits offsetting a difficult fourth quarter hit by market turmoil.

UBS shares slide despite soaring profits for 2015
Photo: AFP

Last year, Switzerland's largest bank raked in a net profit of 6.2 billion francs ($6.1 billion), it said in its earning statement.
   
“Despite a very challenging environment, we had an excellent year,” UBS chief Sergio Ermotti said in the statement.
   
Investors were not convinced.

After UBS released its results, it saw its share price shrink more than seven percent to 15.50 francs a piece as the Swiss
stock exchange's main SMI index dipped 1.5 percent.
   
The bank acknowledged that its “fourth quarter was characterized by very low levels of client activity and pronounced risk aversion.”
   
But thanks to a hefty net tax benefit, UBS still easily outperformed expectations.
   
For the October to December quarter, the bank posted a net profit of 949 million francs, up from 858 million a year earlier.
   
Analysts polled by the AWP financial news agency had expected UBS to post a net profit of 626 million francs for the quarter.
   
UBS said its fourth quarter result included a net tax benefit of 715 million francs, mainly linked to an “upward revaluation of deferred tax assets”, counterbalanced by 365 million francs in provisions for litigation and regulatory matters.
   
The quarter also included a charge of 257 million francs linked to a debt buyback programme.
   
UBS's vital wealth management division meanwhile saw its adjusted profit before tax swell 13 percent in 2015 to 2.8 billion francs — its best result since 2008.
   
And it pulled in 22.8 billion in new money under its management during the year.
   
But during the final quarter of the year, the division saw its operating profit plunge 47 percent to 344 billion francs “amid very low levels of client activity,” UBS said.
   
And during the quarter, net new money outflows ticked in at 3.4 billion francs as clients, especially in emerging markets and Europe, liquidated their positions to reduce debt, more than offsetting continued inflows from the Asia Pacific region and Switzerland.
   
The US wealth management division, which is counted separately, had an even rougher quarter, seeing its operating profit plunge 94 percent to just $13 billion amid “substantial charges for litigation, regulatory and similar matters”.
   
The investment bank division meanwhile posted a 1.8-billion-franc profit for the year, but was slammed in the fourth quarter by the global market slowdown, seeing its operating profit slump 63 percent to 80 million francs.
   
Looking forward, the bank acknowledged that the macroeconomic challenges it has been facing were “unlikely to be resolved in the foreseeable future.”
   
“Negative market performance and substantial market volatility since the start of 2016, low interest rates, and the relative strength of the Swiss franc, particularly against the euro, continue to present headwinds,” UBS said.
   
The bank said it aimed to pay a 2015 dividend to shareholders of 0.60 francs per ordinary share and a special dividend of 0.25 francs.

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GERMANY

Germany cracks down on fake Covid vaccine documents

German police have set up a special team to fight a growing number of forged vaccine certificates being sold in the black market

Germany cracks down on fake Covid vaccine documents
People who are fully vaccinated can show their vaccination booklet, which has a stamp and a sticker inside. Photo: Ina FASSBENDER / AFP

Police in Cologne have warned of a group of fraudsters selling fake vaccination certificates, a growing problem the scale of which is still unclear.

The police said the fraudsters worked in encrypted Telegram chats, making investigations difficult, and were selling fake documents with all the stamps and signatures, including a mark about vaccination with BioNTech or AstraZeneca.

READ ALSO: Germany probes Covid-19 testing centres for fraud

The fraud involved both real traffic in fake documents as well as scams luring customers into paying €100.

People in Germany who are fully vaccinated can show their vaccination booklet, which has a stamp and a sticker inside. Those who don’t have a booklet get a piece of paper.

Covid health passes are currently being rolled out across the EU, with a European health passport expected to be available from mid-June.

READ ALSO: What’s the latest on how the EU’s ‘Covid passports’ will work for travellers?

Over 44% of the adult population in Germany has received at least one dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, and more than 18% of Germans have been fully vaccinated.

German police have said forged coronavirus vaccine documents are becoming an increasing problem.

Last month, a couple in Baden-Württemberg was accused of selling fake coronavirus vaccination certificates.

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