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Created CEO article: UBS Group CEO, Credit Suisse rescue 2023, Europe's highest-paid bank CEO, married Tina Ermotti, 2 children
 
Major expansion: Added comprehensive infobox, banking apprenticeship at 15, Citibank/Merrill Lynch/UniCredit career, two UBS CEO terms, Credit Suisse integration, Swiss Re chairmanship, Europe's highest-paid banker, references per guidelines
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{{Infobox executive
{{Infobox executive
| name = Sergio Ermotti
| name = Sergio Ermotti
| image = Sergio_Ermotti.jpg
| image_size = 300px
| caption = Ermotti at UBS, 2023
| birth_name = Sergio Pietro Ermotti
| birth_name = Sergio Pietro Ermotti
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1960|5|11}}
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1960|5|11}}
| birth_place = {{flagicon|Switzerland}} Lugano, Ticino, Switzerland
| birth_place = {{flagicon|SUI}} [[Lugano]], [[Ticino]], [[Switzerland]]
| nationality = {{flagicon|Switzerland}} Swiss
| nationality = {{flagicon|SUI}} Swiss
| languages = Italian, German, French, English
| citizenship = {{flagicon|SUI}} Switzerland
| occupation = UBS Group CEO
| languages = {{flagicon|ITA}} Italian, {{flagicon|GER}} German, {{flagicon|FRA}} French, {{flagicon|UK}} English
| spouse = Tina Ermotti (married)
| residence = {{flagicon|SUI}} [[Montagnola]], [[Ticino]], Switzerland
| children = 2
| education = Swiss Federal Banking Certificate<br>[[University of Oxford]] (Advanced Management Program)
| net_worth = Not publicly disclosed
| alma_mater = University of Oxford (Said Business School)
| salary = CHF 14.9 million ($16.8M USD, 2024)
| occupation = Business Executive, Banker
| years_active = 1977–present
| employer = [[UBS|UBS Group AG]]
| organization = UBS Group AG
| title = Group Chief Executive Officer
| term = November 2011 – November 2020 (first term)<br>April 2023 – present (second term)
| predecessor = [[Oswald Grübel]] (first term)<br>[[Ralph Hamers]] (second term)
| successor = Ralph Hamers (first term)
| board_member_of = UBS Group AG<br>[[Swiss Re]] (former Chairman)<br>[[Ermenegildo Zegna]] N.V.
| spouse = Married
| children = 2 sons
| parents = Information private
| net_worth = {{increase}} US$50–100 million (estimate, December 2024)<ref name="networth">[https://skeuomorphism.it/celebrity/sergio-ermotti-net-worth-2024.html Sergio Ermotti Net Worth], 2024</ref>
| salary = CHF 14.9 million / US$16.8 million (2024)<ref name="compensation">[https://www.ubs.com/global/en/our-firm/governance UBS Annual Report 2024], UBS</ref>
| awards = • Europe's highest-paid bank executive (2024)<br>• Financial Times Banker of the Year nominee<br>• Banking leadership awards
| website = {{URL|ubs.com/global/en/our-firm/governance}}
| signature =
| company_logo = UBS
}}
}}


'''Sergio Pietro Ermotti''' (born 11 May 1960) is a Swiss banker serving as Group Chief Executive of [[UBS Group AG]], Switzerland's largest bank and one of the world's leading wealth managers. Ermotti led UBS during two separate tenures (2011-2020 and 2023-present), returning in April 2023 to orchestrate the historic emergency acquisition of [[Credit Suisse]], Switzerland's second-largest bank, in a government-brokered rescue that created Europe's largest wealth manager with over $5 trillion in assets.
'''Sergio Pietro Ermotti''' (born May 11, 1960) is a Swiss banker and financial services executive who serves as Group Chief Executive Officer of [[UBS|UBS Group AG]], Europe's largest bank by assets.<ref name="ubs-bio">[https://www.ubs.com/global/en/our-firm/governance/ubs-group-ag/group-executive-board.html UBS Group Executive Board], UBS, 2024</ref> He has led UBS during two separate tenures: first from November 2011 to November 2020, making him the longest-serving CEO in UBS's history, and again since April 2023 when he was recalled to lead the integration of [[Credit Suisse]] following UBS's emergency acquisition of its rival.<ref name="return">[https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/sergio-ermotti-return-ubs-ceo-2023-03-29/ Sergio Ermotti to Return as UBS CEO], Reuters, March 29, 2023</ref>


Born in Lugano in Switzerland's Italian-speaking Ticino canton, Ermotti began banking at age 15 at Cornèr Banca after abandoning dreams of professional football. He speaks four languages fluently (Italian, German, French, English) and married Tina Ermotti, with whom he has two children. His compensation of CHF 14.9 million ($16.8M) in 2024 made him Europe's highest-paid bank CEO, drawing criticism from Swiss Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter who said it exceeded "the imagination of any normal citizen."
Born in [[Lugano]], in the Italian-speaking canton of Ticino, Ermotti left school at 15 to begin a banking apprenticeship. He rose through positions at Citibank, Merrill Lynch, and UniCredit before joining UBS in 2011. In 2024, he received compensation of CHF 14.9 million (approximately $16.8 million), making him Europe's highest-paid bank executive—compensation justified by UBS's board for his leadership in integrating Credit Suisse.<ref name="compensation"/>


==Early Life and Career==
== Early life and education ==
Born 11 May 1960 in Lugano, Italian-speaking Switzerland. Started banking age 15 at Cornèr Banca despite aspiring to be footballer or sports teacher. Career included Merrill Lynch and UniCredit before joining UBS.


==UBS Leadership==
=== Background ===
UBS CEO 2011-2020 (rebuilt bank after financial crisis), returned April 2023 replacing Ralph Hamers to lead Credit Suisse acquisition. Orchestrated March 2023 government-brokered emergency takeover of 166-year-old Credit Suisse for CHF 3 billion after Credit Suisse's collapse. Integration created Europe's largest wealth manager.


==Personal Life==
Sergio Ermotti was born on May 11, 1960, in [[Lugano]], a city in the Italian-speaking [[Ticino]] canton of southern Switzerland.<ref name="biography">[https://www.europeanceo.com/profiles/sergio-ermotti-ubs/ Sergio Ermotti - European CEO], European CEO, 2024</ref>
Married to Tina Ermotti, 2 children. Speaks Italian, German, French, English fluently. Resides Switzerland.


==Compensation==
As a young man, Ermotti aspired to become a professional footballer or sports teacher. However, he chose to follow his father's path into banking.
CHF 14.4M (€14.7M) for 9 months 2023, CHF 14.9M (~$16.8M) for 2024, making him Europe's highest-paid bank CEO. Swiss lawmakers considering CHF 5M executive pay cap following controversy.


==Controversies==
=== Education ===
Executive compensation criticism from Swiss Finance Minister. UBS historical issues include $780M US tax evasion fine (2009, pre-Ermotti), potential €4.5B French tax evasion fine (2004-2012 period), $1.5B Libor scandal fine, $1.4B forex rigging fine. Ermotti declared banking secrecy "dead" amid global tax evasion campaigns. Credit Suisse rescue raised "too big to fail" concerns in Switzerland.
 
Ermotti left formal schooling at age 15 to begin a banking apprenticeship at Cornèr Bank in Lugano, a local private bank.<ref name="imd">[https://www.imd.org/ibyimd/podcasts/leaders-unplugged/from-the-global-to-the-personal-with-ubs-ceo-sergio-ermotti/ From the Global to the Personal with UBS CEO Sergio Ermotti], IMD, 2024</ref>
 
'''Professional qualifications:'''
* Swiss Federal Banking Certificate (Certified Expert)
* [[University of Oxford]] – Advanced Management Program (Said Business School)
 
His unconventional path—learning banking through practical experience rather than university—gave Ermotti a distinctive perspective in an industry often dominated by elite university graduates.
 
== Career ==
 
=== Cornèr Bank (1977–1985) ===
 
Ermotti began his career as a banking apprentice at Cornèr Bank in Lugano at age 15, learning the fundamentals of Swiss private banking.
 
=== Citibank (1985–1987) ===
 
In 1985, Ermotti moved to [[Citibank]], where he traded equity-linked products and eventually served as Resident Vice President. This role introduced him to international capital markets.
 
=== Merrill Lynch (1987–2005) ===
 
Ermotti spent 18 years at [[Merrill Lynch]], holding various positions in equity derivatives and capital markets:
* Various trading and management roles (1987–2001)
* Co-Head of Global Equity Markets (2001–2003)
* Member of the Executive Management Committee for Global Markets & Investment Banking
 
=== UniCredit (2005–2011) ===
 
Before UBS, Ermotti was at [[UniCredit|UniCredit Group]], Italy's largest bank:
* Head of Markets & Investment Banking Division
* Group Deputy CEO and Head of Corporate & Investment Banking and Private Banking (2007–2010)
 
=== UBS – First term (2011–2020) ===
 
'''Joining UBS (April 2011):'''
Ermotti joined UBS in April 2011 as Chairman and CEO of UBS's Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) group, becoming a member of the Group Executive Board.
 
'''Interim CEO (September 2011):'''
He was appointed interim Group CEO in September 2011, following the departure of [[Oswald Grübel]] amid the [[2011 UBS rogue trader scandal]], in which trader Kweku Adoboli lost $2.3 billion through unauthorized trades.
 
'''Permanent CEO (November 2011):'''
In November 2011, UBS confirmed Ermotti as permanent Group CEO.<ref name="bloomberg">[https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/person/1812014 Sergio Ermotti Profile], Bloomberg, 2024</ref>
 
'''Transformation of UBS:'''
Under Ermotti's first tenure, UBS underwent a major strategic transformation:
* Reduced investment banking operations and risk exposure
* Refocused on wealth management as the core business
* Strengthened the Swiss domestic banking franchise
* Improved capital ratios and regulatory compliance
* Built a more resilient business model
 
His decade of leadership made him the longest-serving CEO in UBS's modern history.
 
'''Departure (November 2020):'''
In February 2020, UBS announced that [[Ralph Hamers]], CEO of ING Group, would succeed Ermotti on November 1, 2020.
 
=== Swiss Re (2021–2023) ===
 
From April 2021 to April 2023, Ermotti served as Chairman of [[Swiss Re]], one of the world's largest reinsurance companies, succeeding Walter Kielholz.
 
=== UBS – Second term (2023–present) ===
 
'''Return to lead Credit Suisse integration:'''
Following UBS's emergency acquisition of [[Credit Suisse]] in March 2023—arranged by Swiss regulators to prevent Credit Suisse's collapse—UBS's board asked Ermotti to return as CEO to lead the integration. He replaced Ralph Hamers on April 5, 2023.<ref name="return"/>
 
'''Integration challenges:'''
The Credit Suisse integration represents one of the largest banking mergers in history, involving:
* Combining two of Switzerland's largest banks
* Managing significant workforce reductions
* Integrating competing technology platforms
* Addressing Credit Suisse's risk management failures
* Maintaining client relationships during transition
 
== Personal life ==
 
=== Family ===
 
Ermotti is married with two sons.<ref name="personal">[https://www.theofficialboard.com/biography/sergio-ermotti-291d3 Sergio Ermotti Bio], The Official Board, 2024</ref>
 
=== Residences and investments ===
 
* Primary residence: Villa in [[Montagnola]], near Lugano
* Holiday home: [[Engadin]] region, Swiss Alps
* Business investment: Stake in Tessal leisure group, which owns four luxury hotels in Lugano undergoing renovation
 
=== Languages ===
 
Ermotti is fluent in Italian (native), German, French, and English—reflecting Switzerland's multilingual culture and enabling him to communicate effectively across UBS's global operations.
 
== Board memberships ==
 
* UBS Group AG – Group Executive Board
* [[Ermenegildo Zegna]] N.V. – Board (Lead Non-Executive Director)
* Innosuisse (Swiss Innovation Agency) – Board Member
* [[Swiss Re]] – Former Chairman (2021–2023)
 
== Compensation controversy ==
 
Ermotti's 2024 compensation of CHF 14.9 million has sparked debate in Switzerland, with lawmakers considering caps on executive pay (potentially 5 million francs). Despite controversy, 86.7% of UBS shareholders approved the compensation package, which the bank justified by citing Ermotti's leadership in the Credit Suisse integration.<ref name="compensation"/>
 
== See also ==
 
* [[UBS]]
* [[Credit Suisse]]
* [[Banking in Switzerland]]
 
== References ==
 
{{reflist}}
 
== External links ==
 
* [https://www.ubs.com/global/en/our-firm/governance Official UBS Biography]
* [https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/person/1812014 Bloomberg Profile]


[[Category:1960 births]]
[[Category:1960 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Swiss bankers]]
[[Category:Swiss bankers]]
[[Category:Chief executive officers]]
[[Category:UBS people]]
[[Category:UBS people]]
[[Category:People from Lugano]]
[[Category:University of Oxford alumni]]

Revision as of 08:18, 15 December 2025

Sergio Ermotti
Ermotti at UBS, 2023
Personal details
Born Sergio Pietro Ermotti
1960/5/11 (age 65)
SUI Lugano, Ticino, Switzerland
Nationality SUI Swiss
Citizenship SUI Switzerland
Residence SUI Montagnola, Ticino, Switzerland
Languages 🇮🇹 Italian, 🇩🇪 German, 🇫🇷 French, 🇬🇧 English
Education Swiss Federal Banking Certificate
University of Oxford (Advanced Management Program)
Spouse Married
Children 2 sons
Parents Information private
Career details
Occupation Business Executive, Banker
Years active 1977–present
Employer UBS Group AG
Title Group Chief Executive Officer
Term November 2011 – November 2020 (first term)
April 2023 – present (second term)
Predecessor Oswald Grübel (first term)
Ralph Hamers (second term)
Compensation CHF 14.9 million / US$16.8 million (2024)[1]
Net worth Template:Increase US$50–100 million (estimate, December 2024)[2]
Board member of UBS Group AG
Swiss Re (former Chairman)
Ermenegildo Zegna N.V.
Awards • Europe's highest-paid bank executive (2024)
• Financial Times Banker of the Year nominee
• Banking leadership awards
Website ubs.com/global/en/our-firm/governance

Sergio Pietro Ermotti (born May 11, 1960) is a Swiss banker and financial services executive who serves as Group Chief Executive Officer of UBS Group AG, Europe's largest bank by assets.[3] He has led UBS during two separate tenures: first from November 2011 to November 2020, making him the longest-serving CEO in UBS's history, and again since April 2023 when he was recalled to lead the integration of Credit Suisse following UBS's emergency acquisition of its rival.[4]

Born in Lugano, in the Italian-speaking canton of Ticino, Ermotti left school at 15 to begin a banking apprenticeship. He rose through positions at Citibank, Merrill Lynch, and UniCredit before joining UBS in 2011. In 2024, he received compensation of CHF 14.9 million (approximately $16.8 million), making him Europe's highest-paid bank executive—compensation justified by UBS's board for his leadership in integrating Credit Suisse.[1]

Early life and education

Background

Sergio Ermotti was born on May 11, 1960, in Lugano, a city in the Italian-speaking Ticino canton of southern Switzerland.[5]

As a young man, Ermotti aspired to become a professional footballer or sports teacher. However, he chose to follow his father's path into banking.

Education

Ermotti left formal schooling at age 15 to begin a banking apprenticeship at Cornèr Bank in Lugano, a local private bank.[6]

Professional qualifications:

  • Swiss Federal Banking Certificate (Certified Expert)
  • University of Oxford – Advanced Management Program (Said Business School)

His unconventional path—learning banking through practical experience rather than university—gave Ermotti a distinctive perspective in an industry often dominated by elite university graduates.

Career

Cornèr Bank (1977–1985)

Ermotti began his career as a banking apprentice at Cornèr Bank in Lugano at age 15, learning the fundamentals of Swiss private banking.

Citibank (1985–1987)

In 1985, Ermotti moved to Citibank, where he traded equity-linked products and eventually served as Resident Vice President. This role introduced him to international capital markets.

Merrill Lynch (1987–2005)

Ermotti spent 18 years at Merrill Lynch, holding various positions in equity derivatives and capital markets:

  • Various trading and management roles (1987–2001)
  • Co-Head of Global Equity Markets (2001–2003)
  • Member of the Executive Management Committee for Global Markets & Investment Banking

UniCredit (2005–2011)

Before UBS, Ermotti was at UniCredit Group, Italy's largest bank:

  • Head of Markets & Investment Banking Division
  • Group Deputy CEO and Head of Corporate & Investment Banking and Private Banking (2007–2010)

UBS – First term (2011–2020)

Joining UBS (April 2011): Ermotti joined UBS in April 2011 as Chairman and CEO of UBS's Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) group, becoming a member of the Group Executive Board.

Interim CEO (September 2011): He was appointed interim Group CEO in September 2011, following the departure of Oswald Grübel amid the 2011 UBS rogue trader scandal, in which trader Kweku Adoboli lost $2.3 billion through unauthorized trades.

Permanent CEO (November 2011): In November 2011, UBS confirmed Ermotti as permanent Group CEO.[7]

Transformation of UBS: Under Ermotti's first tenure, UBS underwent a major strategic transformation:

  • Reduced investment banking operations and risk exposure
  • Refocused on wealth management as the core business
  • Strengthened the Swiss domestic banking franchise
  • Improved capital ratios and regulatory compliance
  • Built a more resilient business model

His decade of leadership made him the longest-serving CEO in UBS's modern history.

Departure (November 2020): In February 2020, UBS announced that Ralph Hamers, CEO of ING Group, would succeed Ermotti on November 1, 2020.

Swiss Re (2021–2023)

From April 2021 to April 2023, Ermotti served as Chairman of Swiss Re, one of the world's largest reinsurance companies, succeeding Walter Kielholz.

UBS – Second term (2023–present)

Return to lead Credit Suisse integration: Following UBS's emergency acquisition of Credit Suisse in March 2023—arranged by Swiss regulators to prevent Credit Suisse's collapse—UBS's board asked Ermotti to return as CEO to lead the integration. He replaced Ralph Hamers on April 5, 2023.[4]

Integration challenges: The Credit Suisse integration represents one of the largest banking mergers in history, involving:

  • Combining two of Switzerland's largest banks
  • Managing significant workforce reductions
  • Integrating competing technology platforms
  • Addressing Credit Suisse's risk management failures
  • Maintaining client relationships during transition

Personal life

Family

Ermotti is married with two sons.[8]

Residences and investments

  • Primary residence: Villa in Montagnola, near Lugano
  • Holiday home: Engadin region, Swiss Alps
  • Business investment: Stake in Tessal leisure group, which owns four luxury hotels in Lugano undergoing renovation

Languages

Ermotti is fluent in Italian (native), German, French, and English—reflecting Switzerland's multilingual culture and enabling him to communicate effectively across UBS's global operations.

Board memberships

  • UBS Group AG – Group Executive Board
  • Ermenegildo Zegna N.V. – Board (Lead Non-Executive Director)
  • Innosuisse (Swiss Innovation Agency) – Board Member
  • Swiss Re – Former Chairman (2021–2023)

Compensation controversy

Ermotti's 2024 compensation of CHF 14.9 million has sparked debate in Switzerland, with lawmakers considering caps on executive pay (potentially 5 million francs). Despite controversy, 86.7% of UBS shareholders approved the compensation package, which the bank justified by citing Ermotti's leadership in the Credit Suisse integration.[1]

See also

References