
UBS buybacks may be hit by new capital rules: government
ZURICH, June 6 (Reuters) - UBS (UBSG.S), opens new tab may be able to carry out fewer share buy-backs in future following proposals that it should hold higher levels of core capital, the Swiss government said on Friday.
The government proposed higher capital requirements for the lender's foreign units as part of wide-ranging new rules for UBS aimed at making Switzerland's financial centre more robust in the wake of the collapse of Credit Suisse in 2023.
Dividend payments and organic growth should still be possible, subject to "appropriate transitions periods and provided profits have been generated," the government said.
"The measure could mean that UBS will temporarily implement fewer share buybacks and reports a slightly lower return on equity along with lower risks," the government said in a statement.
UBS Chairman Colm Kelleher in April reiterated the Swiss bank's intention to repurchase shares to the tune of $3 billion in 2025, despite the looming capital rule changes and global economic uncertainty.
The growth of foreign subsidiaries or acquisition of foreign companies by UBS will still be possible, but will become more expensive because it has to be fully financed by the core capital, the government added.
"The measure can therefore make foreign growth in subsidiaries more expensive," it added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Borussia Dortmund to pay MORE for Jobe Bellingham than they did for his brother Jude as German club reach agreement with Sunderland
Jobe Bellingham is set to follow in his brother's footsteps after Borussia Dortmund agreed a fee with with Sunderland that is higher than what they paid for Jude in 2020. The 19-year old midfielder helped Sunderland clinch promotion and has now decided to take his talents to Germany. Dortmund will pay an initial £27.8million fee plus £4.2m in potential add-ons, according to talkSPORT. Bellingham will become Sunderland's record sale, overtaking the £25m transfer of Jordan Pickford to Everton in 2017. And he will cost Dortmund more than his superstar brother did five years ago. Jude, now a key player for Real Madrid, joined the Bundesliga outfit from Birmingham City as a 17-year-old in 2020 for £25m. Eintracht Frankfurt and Red Bull Leipzig were the other German clubs that spoke to the 20-year-old. A number of Premier League sides also held interest, but initial indications are Bellingham is preparing to follow a similar path to his brother Jude who extolled the benefits of life in Germany with Dortmund. After three years at Dortmund, Jude - who spoke to his brother via video call after the play-off final - went on to join Real Madrid, where he is now a Real Madrid regular. The elder Bellingham won a Champions League medal last year, Madrid beating his old club Dortmund in the final. Sunderland have been aware of ongoing interest in Jobe since January. His previous club Birmingham City are also due a significant sell-on.


Telegraph
3 hours ago
- Telegraph
Farage: We'll reopen steel blast furnaces if we win in Wales
Nigel Farage will vow on Monday to reopen Port Talbot's blast furnaces, placing the return of traditional steelmaking at the heart of his campaign to win next year's Welsh elections. The Reform leader will use a speech in the southern Welsh town to decry the collapse of the steelmaking industry and question the strategy being adopted by Labour. It is the latest attempt to outflank Labour on the Left and further build on Reform's surge of popularity, which has sent it surging to the top of UK opinion polls in recent months. Mr Farage believes his party has a chance of winning the Welsh Parliament elections next spring, in what would be a seismic result given Labour's long-held dominance across the border. The speech is an attempt to draw a line under party feuding that led Zia Yusuf to quit as Reform's chairman on Thursday, only to reverse his decision and return on Saturday. Mr Yusuf now has four responsibilities, including leading the party's 'Doge' spending efficiencies project, named after tech billionaire Elon Musk's drive to slash bureaucracy in America. A new chairman to accompany Mr Yusuf will be unveiled on Tuesday. His role has now been split in two, with a new deputy chairman also taking on some of Mr Yusuf's old responsibilities. The Port Talbot plant was, until recently, the UK's largest steelmaker, but Tata Steel, the Indian firm that runs it, announced last year that the remaining blast furnaces would be closed, leading to the loss of up to 2,800 jobs at the site. The blast furnaces are being replaced with an electric arc furnace, which will produce less steel but in a more eco-friendly way. It will not be fully operational until 2028. Mr Farage is expected to say that he wants Port Talbot's blast furnaces to reopen in the long run, while admitting the outcome is not easy to achieve. While exploring options to viability, it is understood that Mr Farage will indicate that, if necessary, he is open to nationalisation, were Reform in power. Mr Farage's spokesman said: 'Nigel will say it's our long-term ambition to reopen the blast furnaces, not the electric arc ones, as we don't believe they will ever be online due to sky-high electricity prices. '[Mr Farage] will talk about the heritage of Wales, with Port Talbot Steelworks once being the largest steel plant in Europe, and also Wales, which once produced almost 60 million tons of coal per year, exporting half. The spokesman added: 'South Wales alone was the biggest coal exporter in the world. The Cardiff Coal Exchange set the global price for steam coal. Swansea once smelted most of the world's copper. Merthyr Tydfil was the world's largest producer of iron.' The spokesman added: 'Basically, Nigel will tap into the hearts and minds of a deeply patriotic nation that feels betrayed and forgotten about by Labour.' Working-class voters Mr Farage's trip to Wales underscores how he sees the next milestone in his party's surge in support coming first in the country's parliamentary elections in May 2026. Elections will also be held for the Scottish Parliament next year. Reform insiders were left buoyed at getting one in four votes at the Hamilton by-election last week, despite coming third. Mr Farage's embrace of Port Talbot's steelmaking past is the latest sign that he is adopting an economic agenda deliberately designed to grab political territory vacated by Labour. The Reform leader called for the nationalisation of British Steel earlier this year, weeks before government ministers announced the move. He has also called for the two-child benefit cap to be lifted and for the cut to winter fuel payments for pensioners to be reversed in full, aligning himself with many Labour MPs. Both measures have since been adopted by the Government. The focus on economic interventionism has seen him position the party to the Left on these matters with Sir Keir Starmer's party, as Reform targets disillusioned working-class voters. Andy Haldane, the former Bank of England economist, said that Mr Farage had become a 'tribune' for the views and frustrations of working-class Britons. Mr Haldane told The Guardian: 'What is certainly true is Nigel Farage is as close to what the country has to a tribune for the working classes. 'I don't think there's any politician that comes even remotely close to speaking to, and for, blue-collar, working-class Britain. 'I think that is just a statement of fact, and in some ways that underscores the importance of the other parties doing somewhat better to find a story, to find a language and to find some policies that speak to the needs of those most in need.'


Sky News
4 hours ago
- Sky News
The winners and losers in Rachel Reeves's spending review
"It's a big deal for this government," says Simon Case. "It's the clearest indication yet of what they plan to do between now and the general election, a translation of their manifesto. "This is where you should expect the chancellor to say, on behalf of the government: 'This is what we're about'." As the former cabinet secretary, Mr Case was the man in charge of the civil service during the last spending review, in 2021. On Wednesday, Rachel Reeves will unveil the Labour government's priorities for the next three years. But it's unclear whether it will provide all that much of an answer about what it's really about. Unlike the Autumn budget, when the chancellor announced her plans on where to tax and borrow to fund overall levels of spending, the spending review will set out exactly how that money is divided up between the different government departments. Since the start of the process in December those departments have been bidding for their share of the cash - setting out their proposed budgets in a negotiation which looks set to continue right up to the wire. This review is being conducted in an usual level of detail, with every single line of spending assessed, according to the chancellor, on whether it represents value for money and meets the government's priorities. Budget proposals have been scrutinised by so called "challenge panels" of independent experts. It's clear that health and defence will be winners in this process given pre-existing commitments to prioritise the NHS - with a boost of up to £30bn expected - and to increase defence spending. On Sunday morning, the government press release trumpeted an impressive-sounding "£86bn boost" to research and development (R&D), with the Science and Technology Secretary Peter Kyle sent out on the morning media round to celebrate as record levels of investment. 14:18 We're told this increased spending on the life sciences, advanced manufacturing and defence will lead to jobs and growth across the country, with every £1 in investment set to lead to a £7 economic return. But the headline figure is misleading. It's not £86bn in new funding. That £86bn has been calculated by adding together all R&D investment across government for the next three years, which will reach an annual figure of £22.5bn by 2029-30. The figure for this year was already set to be £20.4bn; so while it's a definite uplift, much of that money was already allocated. Peter Kyle also highlighted plans for "the most we've ever spent per pupil in our school system". I understand the schools budget is to be boosted by £4.5bn. Again, this is clearly an uplift - but over a three-year period, that equates to just £1.5bn a year (compared with an existing budget of £63.7bn). It also has to cover the cost of extending free school meals, and the promised uplift in teachers' pay. In any process of prioritisation there are losers as well as winners. We already know about planned cuts to the Department of Work and Pensions - but other unprotected departments like the Home Office and the Department of Communities and Local Government are braced for a real spending squeeze. We've heard dire warnings about austerity 2.0, and the impact that would have on the government's crime and policing priorities, its promises around housing and immigration, and on the budgets for cash-strapped local councils. The chancellor wants to make it clear to the markets she's sticking to her fiscal rules on balancing the books for day-to-day spending. But the decision to loosen the rules around borrowing to fund capital investment have given her greater room to manoeuvre in funding long-term infrastructure projects. That's why we've seen her travelling around the country this week to promote the £15.6bn she's spending on regional transport projects. The Treasury team clearly wants to focus on promoting the generosity of these kind of investments, and we'll hear more in the coming days. But there's a real risk the story of this spending review will be about the departments which have lost out - and the promises which could slip as a result.