UBS revamps how it sells private asset funds as demand booms

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UBS Group is seeking to cement its position as top-five player among global limited partners, by pooling all of the bank's private-markets offerings into one unit. 

The business, Unified Global Alternatives, will combine the bank's fund selection of its Global Wealth Management division and its institutional asset management business, according to a memo seen by Bloomberg News. 

UGA will be led by Johannes Roth and Jerry Pascucci, who will report into the head of Asset Management Aleksandar Ivanovic and Yves-Alain Sommerhalder. Sommerhalder is leading a broader project to strengthen UBS's wealth ties with other business areas such as the investment bank. 

READ MORE: UBS makes Karofsky and Khan wealth co-heads in shakeup

UBS wants to provide a wider offering of alternative funds — everything from buyout shops to hedge funds to real estate — to all of its clients. UBS's asset management and wealth business together manage $250 billion of invested assets in alternative markets.

The move may be well timed, as LP firms are cutting down on relationships with distributors and private equity funds and increasingly seeking to have "one-stop-shops." For UBS it is also an opportunity for collaborations between its asset management and wealth management LPs for co-investments.

READ MORE: UBS' AUM tops $4T as wealth profits slump

Private markets have been booming over the past decade thanks to low interest rates and rising valuations, helping pension funds and institutional investors to boost returns they wouldn't find in public markets. 

Bloomberg News
Wealth management Investment strategies UBS
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