UBS exits commodities
The move comes as part of a “repositioning” of its investment bank, which will see around 2000 staff cut from its global workforce of 19,000 before the end of this year. Over 4000 staff have already been made redundant this year, subsequent to the bank losing around $42 billion in the credit markets.
A UBS spokesman said that staff numbers in the fixed income, currency and commodities (FICC) division will be cut by 21%, without giving a specific figure. The FICC division will be repositioned “around client servicing and facilitation”, according to a UBS statement.
The spokesman stated that UBS will maintain an exchange-traded derivatives presence in commodities, and will continue to offer commodity-related structured products.
“The ongoing crisis in the financial markets and dramatically changed industry dynamics require us to recalibrate our business,” said UBS CEO Jerker Johansson in a statement.
UBS had scaled back its energy operations earlier this year, but remained present in US and European natural gas and power markets and the oil markets. The bank also had a presence in base metals, as an associate broker clearing member of the London Metals Exchange.
More on Risk management
CRO interview: Shawnie McBride
NRG’s chief risk officer Shawnie McBride discusses the challenges of increasingly interconnected risks, fostering a risk culture and her most useful working habits
Increasingly interconnected risks require unified risk management
Operational risk is on the rise according to a Moody's survey, making unified risk management vital, say Sapna Amlani and Stephen Golliker
Energy Risk Europe Leaders’ Network: geopolitical risk
Energy Risk’s European Leaders’ Network had its first meeting in November to discuss the risks posed to energy firms by recent geopolitical developments
Energy Risk US Leaders’ Network: tackling volatility
Energy Risk’s inaugural US Leaders’ Network convened in Houston in October to discuss risk management challenges caused by geopolitical upheaval, policy uncertainty and volatility
LNG trading strategies set to change amid major market shifts
The global LNG market is on the brink of significant changes set to alter trading dynamics and market behaviour, say analysts
Why commodity finance is ripe for stablecoin
Digital currency brings cost efficiencies to financing, but its real benefit to commodity firms lies in making huge pools of new capital available, write Jean-Marc Bonnefous and Ronan Julien
US shutdown leaves commodity traders without key data
Commodity traders are ‘flying blind’ without Commitment of Traders reports
Energy Risk at 30: Learning from the past
Energy Risk looks back at the seminal events and developments that have shaped today’s energy markets