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Sergio Ermotti

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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