UBS Group To Be Banned From Sponsoring IPOs In Hong Kong

 | Mar 12, 2018 10:28PM ET

UBS Group AG (NYSE:UBS) has been banned by The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission from sponsoring initial public offerings (IPO) for a period of 18 months.

Also, a fine of HK$119 million has been levied on UBS Group. Though the bank has not specified the reason behind this penalty, in the latest annual filing, UBS Group mentioned its intentions to contest the regulators’ decision.

However, the Swiss bank has assured its employees of continuing "business as normal" via an internal memo sent by Andrea Orcel and David Chin, global and Asia-Pacific heads of UBS's investment bank, per a Reuters article.

UBS Group seeks to continue sponsoring IPOs till its appeal is heard by the authorities. Also, the bank informed the employees that it expects the full hearing of the appeal to happen in fourth-quarter 2018 and a final decision to made early in 2019.

The suspension comes when the city’s investors are anticipating to witness some potential floats in the nearterm. Hong Kong IPOs require at least one sponsoring bank that leads the work, i.e. collection of a significant proportion of the feeswhile the deal is in progress.

Further, if a company wishes to change sponsor in the middle of its IPO process due to a sponsor's suspension,the whole listing process will have to start over again, leading to months of additional work.

Moreover, the regulator is investigating works of about 15 more firms of their role as sponsors, which is likely to have resulted in losses of about billions of dollars for investors.

UBS Group’s suspension from IPO sponsoring might keep revenues under pressure as it depends significantly on its wealth management and private banking segments. Also, its profitability continues to be challenged by negative interest rates in the domestic economy.

Shares of UBS Group have gained 17.1% over the past year, outperforming the industry ’s rally of 14.9%.