Zurich / Basel, November 1, 2005
Municipal securities move house
When Massachusetts reorganized its
school building program, it appointed
UBS as bookrunner of a highly successful
USD 2.5 billion bond issue. The
state was not alone in its choice of
a partner. In 2004, UBS led 566 new
issues worth over USD 41 billion, more
than any other firm, for US state governments,
hospitals, and educational
foundations.
UBS inherited the municipal securities
team from its merger with PaineWebber
in 2000 and has since built this New
York-based business into a primary
market leader. Todays business is an
integrated unit, comprising an investment
banking capability, syndication,
institutional and retail sales, research,
and derivatives marketing. Regional
trading desks are located in Chicago,
Dallas, Los Angeles, Nashville, and
Orlando, as well as New York.
With total annual issuance volumes
approaching USD 400 billion, municipal
securities are an integral part of
the North American fixed income
market. The market has grown to USD
2.1 trillion in outstanding bond market
debt, compared with USD 5.0 trillion
for the corporate market. For UBS,
municipal securities form a part of its
comprehensive offering to both institutional
and private clients for whom
they represent a secure, attractive
investment exempt from federal
income tax.
The business is now moving house.
On 1 July 2005, the municipal securities
business transferred from UBSs
Wealth Management USA business
area to the Investment Bank. Although
the business retains its existing offices
in central Manhattan, the change of
reporting and organizational structure
is still highly significant for its future.
Being part of the Investment Banks
infrastructure and risk management
framework will help it expand its secondary
trading business in line with
demand from institutional clients. It
will also be in a position to work more
closely with other units of the Investment
Bank. A case in point is the units
derivatives business built up over the
past few years via a joint venture
with the Investment Banks rates business.
As primary issuers use derivatives
to hedge risk and capitalize on funding
opportunities, this aspect of the business
is set to grow.
The move therefore makes sense not
only from an internal perspective
risk management, capital allocation,
knowledge-sharing but from the
most important viewpoint of all, that
of clients. As part of the Investment
Bank, the business is now better positioned
to serve both investors and
issuers.