Copy of 2023-09-29T082321Z_769061165_RC27I3AJ3PPB_RTRMADP_3_CREDIT-SUISSE-JOBS-1695978583577
The reclassified loans are part of Credit Suisse assets that have been moved by UBS to a “non-core” unit for wind down. Image Credit: REUTERS

Zurich: Credit Suisse may report additional losses of as much as $2.2 billion in the third quarter, according to the defunct bank’s financial report for the first half of the year.

A loss of $1.6 billion will likely result after UBS Group AG - which acquired Credit Suisse earlier this year - decided to exit some loan portfolios, the report showed. The reclassified loans are part of Credit Suisse assets that have been moved by UBS to a “non-core” unit for wind down.

A further $600 million loss may stem from the decision to “wind down certain management arrangements,” according to the report.

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The potential extra losses come as investors remain optimistic about UBS’s capacity to successfully integrate its former rival. The bank’s shares are poised for their best quarterly share-price gain in 14 years.

UBS reported a $29 billion profit before tax in the second quarter, a result of the accounting difference between the $3.8 billion price the bank paid for Credit Suisse and the value of the acquired lender’s balance sheet.

Last month, UBS signaled that it is closing two-thirds of Credit Suisse’s investment bank, including almost all its trading operations, as part of plans to exit businesses that don’t fit with its existing strategy. Overall, the so-called “non-core” unit had approximately $55 billion of risk-weighted assets at the end of June. Some $8 billion in positions had been exited during the last quarter.