Marcel Ospel will not stand for re-election PDF Print E-mail
UBS Chairman, Marcel Ospel

Should UBS Chairman, Marcel Ospel stand down?  He has resigned.  In our recent poll, 91.2% of you voted for his resignation. The official UBS announcement follows.

Marcel Ospel will not be standing for re-election to the Board of Directors of UBS.

Peter Kurer is nominated for election to the Board and is proposed as Chairman.

Marcel Ospel, Chairman of the Board of UBS, has decided to withdraw his candidacy for re-election to the Board at the Annual General Meeting on 23 April 2008. The Board of Directors has accepted its Chairman's decision with regret. At the same time, the Board proposes that the Annual General Meeting elect Peter Kurer to the Board to succeed Marcel Ospel as Chairman.

"My willingness to stand for re-election for a further one-year term was based on my desire to lead UBS out of its current difficult situation. We have worked very hard and have been able to address the firm's most pressing problems, thereby laying the foundation for the long-term success of the bank," said Marcel Ospel, Chairman of the Board of the UBS. "I have always stated that I ultimately take responsibility for the bank's situation. With the measures that we have already taken, the proposals we are submitting to the Annual General Meeting and the processes we have put in place to deal with lessons learned, I believe that I have made all necessary contributions. On this basis, I remain very confident in the future prospects of UBS."

"The events since the summer of 2007 have affected the bank to an unexpected degree and have proved a great challenge for management and for the Board of Directors. Marcel Ospel resolutely led the bank through these difficult times and made a decisive contribution to solving its problems," said Sergio Marchionne, Vice Chairman of UBS. "Over the course of the last ten years Marcel Ospel led UBS to the top of industry rankings. We, inside and outside the Bank, have known him as an outstanding banker. On behalf of the Board I would like to thank him for his tireless efforts in the last few months."

The Board of Directors proposes to the Annual General Meeting that it elect Peter Kurer, Group General Counsel of UBS, to the Board. It plans to appoint Peter Kurer to succeed Marcel Ospel as Chairman.

Peter Kurer joined UBS in 2001 as Group General Counsel and has been a member of the Group Executive Board since 2002. The Board of Directors thanks him for his willingness to take over this responsibility.

This appointment is part of an extensive process, which is already underway, whereby the Board is reviewing the root causes of and lessons learned from its subprime losses. In particular, the Board is thoroughly examining governance, strategy implementation, risk management, monitoring, and control systems, incentive plans and succession planning and is committed to making all necessary adaptations and changes to ensure it establishes best practices in these areas. Peter Kurer will work closely with the Board on these issues, with appropriate interfaces to the Group Executive Board, with a shared, common objective of ensuring that the institution not only implements the appropriate remediation following the current crisis, but also establishes optimal, permanent governance and leadership solutions on which the Bank’s future as a leading, global, financial institution can be built.

"Peter Kurer has a long and distinguished career as a lawyer in private practice and manager of a large legal and compliance function. He also brings a great deal of experience as a member of boards of financial and other firms and has a thorough knowledge of global financial markets and UBS," said Helmut Panke, Chairman of the Nominating Committee of the UBS Board. "The Board believes that this experience will prove most valuable at this juncture"

”I consider this appointment an honor and great challenge” said Peter Kurer. “I am committed to doing everything I can, in the interests of shareholders, clients, employees and the communities in which we do business, to further help UBS return to success.”

Comments (4)add comment

a guest said:

Now that he has resigned, shareholders must ensure that he does NOT get a massive golden parachute, office etc for years etc.
 
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April 01, 2008
Votes: +2

a guest said:

shareholders have no power, they cannot influence a board unless they all dump their stock, a better question is why do the mutual funds, private banks etc put up with this?
They could easily force a VNC and send this chump packing
 
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March 25, 2008
Votes: +1

a guest said:

marcel vamos amigo
 
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March 25, 2008
Votes: +1

a guest said:

Why do shareholders have to live with a Chairman they have little faith in for another year?
 
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March 14, 2008
Votes: +1

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