📄 Extracted Text (576 words)
From: Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]>
To: Jes Staley
Subject: fyi
Date: Mon, 28 Feb 2011 21:19:20 +0000
Forwarded message
From: Boris Nikolic
B
https://www.ubs.com/ 1 /e/media overview/media_global/releases.html?newsld=188885
UBS Private Bank Names New Hires
By KATIIARINA BART
ZURICH-UBS AG named the former financial head of the Gates Foundation as chief investment officer of its
flagship private bank, one of several prominent hires at the unit, signaling a more assertive tone since the bank
halted massive outflows of wealthy-client funds.
The Zurich-based bank said Alexander Friedman will join UBS on Tuesday. Mr. Friedman left The Bill and Melinda
Gates Foundation, the world's largest private philanthropy fund, early last year to start private investment firm
Asymmetry LLC.
Before his role as chief financial officer at the Gates Foundation, Mr. Friedman worked as a Lazard mergers-and-
acquisitions banker.
At the same time, UBS has hired former White House Deputy Chief of Staff Mona Sutphen and Mark Haefele, an
alternative asset manager. Ms. Sutphen, formerly a managing director at Stonebridge International LLC who left
the White House last month, will lead macro analysis, while Mr. Haefele will be in charge of investment analysis.
Mr. Haefele is co-founder of The Sonic Funds, a Boston-based hedge fund.
Over time, Mr. Friedman, Ms. Sutphen and Mr. Haefele will hire a global team, the bank said.
"The chief investment officer function will focus on wealth protection and optimized financial returns consistent
with client objectives," UBS said in a statement. "Friedman and his team will be responsible for defining and
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proposing appropriate investment allocations and strategies and for communicating them across the platform."
The bank declined to make the three available for comment. "The three new joiners will initially spend some time
familiarizing themselves with UBS, its needs and its client offering before they begin delivering market
observations," private banking head Jtirg Zeltner said in an internal memorandum.
The prominent hires represent a more assertive tone from UBS's private bank, which last year managed to stem the
tide of wealthy-client outflows following more than $50 billion in mortgage-related write-downs and a messy
altercation with U.S. justice and tax officials over tax-evasion allegations.
The bank, which under former Credit Suisse Group boss Oswald Grubel swung to a full-year profit of 7.16 billion
Swiss francs ($7.71 billion) in 2010, settled a criminal probe in part by paying $780 million in a deferred
prosecution agreement.
A separate civil suit brought by the U.S. seeking data on thousands of UBS clients was settled when the Swiss
government stepped in and ordered the handover of more than 4,000 sets of data.
Last week, UBS named William Kennedy as new head of its investment products and services unit, a group set up
last year to more closely tie its flagship private bank with the investment-banking arm. The push is emblematic of
UBS's attempts to cater to wealthier clients with more than $50 million in assets within two years.
Write to Katharina Bart at [email protected]
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