UBS Financial Statements have been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). Until 2006,
UBS also reconciled its Financial Statements to US Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (US GAAP). It will now no longer
do so after the SEC released a final rule on 21 December 2007 under which financial statements from foreign private issuers
in the US will be accepted without reconciliation to GAAP if they are prepared in accordance with IFRS as issued by the International
Accounting Standards Board. As a US listed company, we had provided in the Annual Financial Statements until and including
31 December 2006 a description of the significant differences which would have arisen if our accounts had been presented under
US GAAP, a detailed reconciliation of equity and net profit attributable to UBS shareholders under IFRS to US GAAP, and additional
disclosures required under US GAAP.
Except where clearly identified, all of UBS's financial information presented in this document is presented on a consolidated
basis under IFRS. Pages 121 to 142 contain the financial statements for the UBS AG Parent Bank the Swiss company, including
branches worldwide, which owns all the UBS companies, directly or indirectly. The Parent Bank's financial statements are prepared
in order to meet Swiss regulatory requirements and in compliance with Swiss Banking Law. Except in those pages, or where otherwise
explicitly stated, all references to "UBS" refer to the UBS Group and not to the Parent Bank.
All references to 2007, 2006 and 2005 refer to the UBS Group and the Parent Bank's fiscal years ended 31 December 2007, 2006
and 2005. The Financial Statements for the UBS Group and the Parent Bank have been audited by Ernst & Young Ltd. An explanation
of the critical accounting policies applied in the preparation of our Financial Statements is provided in the next section.
The basis of our accounting is given in Note 1 to the Financial Statements.
Standards for management accounting
Our management reporting systems and policies determine the revenues and expenses directly attributable to each business unit.
The presentation of the business segments reflects UBS's organizational structure and management responsibilities. Internal
charges and transfer pricing adjustments are reflected in the performance of each business unit.
Inter-business unit revenues and expenses. Revenue-sharing agreements are used to allocate external customer revenues to business units on a reasonable basis. Inter-business
unit charges are predominantly reported in the line "Services (to) / from other business units" for both Business units concerned.
Transactions between Business units are conducted at internally agreed transfer prices or at arm's length. Corporate Center
expenses are allocated to the operating Business units to the extent appropriate.
Net interest income is allocated to the Business units based on their balance sheet positions. Assets and liabilities of the financial businesses
are funded through and invested with the central treasury departments, with the net margin reflected in the results of each
Business unit. To complete the allocation, the financial businesses are credited with interest income on their regulatory
capital requirements adding goodwill and excess intangible assets (see below).
Commissions are credited to the Business unit with the corresponding customer relationship, with revenue-sharing agreements for the allocation
of customer revenues where several business units are involved in value creation.
For internal management reporting purposes and in the results discussion, we measure credit loss using an expected loss concept. Expected credit loss reflects the average annual costs that are expected to arise from positions
in the current portfolio that become impaired. The adjusted expected credit loss reported for each Business Group is the expected
credit loss on its portfolio plus the difference between credit loss expense and expected credit loss, amortized over a three-year
period (shown as "deferral"). The difference between the sum of these adjusted expected credit loss figures, which are charged
to the Business Groups or units, and the credit loss expense recorded at Group level for financial reporting purposes is reported
in Corporate Center.
Regulatory capital requirements for the Business units are defined as 10% of BIS risk-weighted assets. To measure capital consumption of the Business units,
we adjust regulatory capital for the goodwill and excess intangible assets allocated. Return on allocated regulatory capital
is a key performance indicator for the Investment Bank and the Business Banking Switzerland unit.
The levels of personnel are expressed in terms of full-time equivalents (FTE) and measured as a percentage of the standard
hours normally worked by permanent full-time staff. The FTE level cannot exceed 1.0 for any individual. The term personnel
comprises all staff and trainees other than contractors.