Mode

qualitative/stocks/UBSG

UBS Group AG

Symbol

UBSG

Sector

Financial Services

Country

CH

Business Model

3.9/5

UBS's business model is anchored by recurring AUM-based fees from Global Wealth Management (the largest division) and contractual spread income from Swiss Personal and Corporate Banking, both of which provide above-average revenue visibility. The Investment Bank introduces transactional revenue volatility, and the ongoing Credit Suisse integration has temporarily compressed operating leverage across the group. Geographic reach across four major regions and a client base spanning millions of accounts reduce concentration risk.

Revenue Predictability

3.75

Summary

Global Wealth Management is driven primarily by recurring net fee income tied to AUM management agreements across $4.75 trillion in division assets as of FY2025. The Investment Bank adds meaningful transaction-based volatility, and group-level revenues declined roughly 10% in FY2025 as integration headwinds and rate normalization weighed, pulling total predictability short of a 70%-recurring threshold.

Product Diversification

3.00

Summary

UBS operates across five segments: Global Wealth Management, Personal and Corporate Banking, Asset Management, Investment Bank, and Non-core. GWM represents an estimated 40-45% of normalized group revenues, placing it firmly in the moderate-concentration range; the secondary divisions are materially sized but broadly correlated to market conditions, limiting true end-market diversification.

Geographic Diversification

3.75

Summary

Americas generates roughly half of GWM invested assets and a plurality of divisional revenues (Q4 2025 GWM Americas revenues were $3.2 billion of a total $6.5 billion for the division). Switzerland, EMEA, and Asia Pacific each contribute meaningfully, with APAC invested assets surpassing $1 trillion for the first time in FY2025. UBS operates in more than 50 countries, and no single country appears to exceed 40% of group revenues.

Scalability

3.25

Summary

Wealth management and asset management are structurally asset-light, with AUM-based fee income growing without proportional headcount additions. The Credit Suisse integration required heavy technology migration, compliance infrastructure, and workforce restructuring, moderating near-term operating leverage; the underlying WM model has inherent scalability that the integration phase has temporarily obscured.

Revenue Quality

3.75

Summary

Recurring management fees on AUM (wealth management and asset management) represent the majority of revenues and are contractual, relationship-based, and mission-critical for UHNW client portfolios. Net interest income from Personal and Corporate Banking adds rate-sensitive but generally stable spread income. Investment banking revenue introduces transactional, market-dependent variability that reduces overall quality relative to a pure fee-based model.

Competitive Advantages

2.6/5

UBS's competitive advantages are narrowest among its moat pillars. The global wealth management franchise creates meaningful client relationships and brand-based retention, but fee rates face ongoing compression, technology barriers are limited, and network effects are absent at the core banking and advisory level. The primary differentiator is brand recognition among the ultra-wealthy, where UBS's reputation for discretion, global access, and depth of its billionaire client network provides genuine retention value that is structurally important.

Pricing Power

2.75

Summary

Switching Costs

3.25

Summary

Network Effects

1.75

Summary

Brand Strength

3.75

Summary

Innovation Barrier

2.25

Summary

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_ Report generated by Moatware Analysis AI

This analysis is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a buy or sell recommendation or financial advice. Do your own research before investing.