UBS has confirmed it is being investigated by US
authorities into whether it helped Americans evade taxes through investments
banned in the US.
The Swiss bank said US regulators were investigating potential sales of
so called "bearer bonds".
These bonds can be transferred without registering ownership, enabling
wealthy clients to potentially hide assets.
"We are cooperating with the authorities in these
investigations," the
bank said.
The fresh investigation by the US Attorney's Office for the Eastern
District of New York and from the US Securities and Exchange Commission comes
after UBS paid $780m (£512m) in 2009 to settle a separate Justice Department
tax-evasion probe.
And it comes as
authorities in a range of countries are considering examining HSBC's actions
in helping more than 100,000 wealthy individuals avoid paying tax.
UBS made the announcement as it revealed a better-than-expected 13%
rise in fourth quarter net profit to 963m Swiss francs (£683.9m).
However, it warned the increased value of the Swiss franc relative to
other currencies, following the Swiss National Bank's decision to abandon the
cap on the currency's value against the euro, would "put pressure" on
its profitability.
"The increased value of the Swiss franc relative to other
currencies, especially the US dollar and the euro, and negative interest rates
in the eurozone and Switzerland will put pressure on our profitability and, if
they persist, on some of our targeted performance levels," it warned.
UBS results for the full year, were hit by more than $1bn to settle
past scandals. In November, it was one of six banks fined by UK and US
regulators over their traders' attempted manipulation of foreign exchange
rates, paying 774m Swiss francs in total.
It also paid $300m in the second quarter to settle charges it helped
wealthy German clients evade tax.
The US Department of Justice (DOJ) is continuing to investigate UBS
over currency manipulation allegations.
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