ZURICH: Banking giant UBS on Monday officially merged its Swiss branches with those of Credit Suisse, but huge challenges remain as it begins the massive task of absorbing the clientele of its fallen domestic rival.
In March last year, UBS was strongarmed by the government into taking over Credit Suisse, then Switzerland’s second biggest bank, over fears it would go under following a series of scandals.
The mega-merger between two banks which both figured among the 30 institutions in the world considered “too big to fail” has created a project of rare complexity.
UBS has successfully completed the first stages of the merger, gradually reassuring sceptical investors, allowing its stock price to soar.
The union was sealed at lightning speed, with the deal finalised within months, but the step-by-step integration process is taking much longer.
The two banks have continued to operate separately, waiting for UBS to tie up the legal merger of the holding companies that oversee the two banks — something it completed at the end of May.
The official merging of the Swiss entities on July 1 means Credit Suisse and UBS staff will be able to begin “working together”, Sabine Keller-Busse, head of UBS’s Swiss unit, said in an interview with the Neue Zurcher Zeitung newspaper last month.
The objective, she said, was to significantly reduce the number of branch offices in Switzerland to a combined 194, down from the current 95 Credit Suisse and 190 UBS branches.
Andreas Venditti, an analyst with Swiss investment managers Vontobel, highlighted that until the two banks fully merged, the scope for cost-cutting was limited.
Monday’s announcement and other recent milestones opened the way, he said, for UBS to “really start reducing costs substantially”.
At the same time, he warned that the technology integration process ahead would not be easy.
“The data on a large number of Credit Suisse clients needs to be transferred to UBS systems,” Venditti pointed out.