Attachment 1
Attachment 1
Attachment 1
The U.S. prosecutors pressed charges on UBS for conspiring to defraud the United States by
impeding the IRS. In a separate suit, the U.S. government requested that UBS to reveal the
names of 52,000 U.S. clients who were believed to be tax evaders. In February 2009, UBS paid
$780 million in fines to settle the charges. Although it initially resisted the pressure to turn over
clients’ information, citing Swiss bank privacy laws, UBS eventually agreed to disclose some
5,000 account details, including individual names, after intense negotiations involving officials
from both countries. Clients left UBS in droves: Operating profit from the bank’s wealth
management division declined by 60 percent, page 525 or $4.4 billion, in 2008 alone; it declined
by another 17 percent, or $504 million, in 2009.
The UBS case has far-reaching implications for the bank’s wealth management business and
the Swiss banking industry as a whole, especially its cherished bank secrecy. To close
loopholes in the QI program and crack down on tax evasion in countries with strict bank secrecy
traditions, President Obama signed into law the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA)
in 2010. The law requires all foreign financial institutions to report offshore accounts and
activities of their U.S. clients with assets over $50,000, and to impose a 30 percent withholding
tax on U.S. investments or to exit the U.S. business. Switzerland has agreed to implement the
FATCA. The annual compliance cost for each Swiss bank is estimated to be $100 million.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
1. This MiniCase details several ethics scandals that occurred at UBS in recent years. What does that
tell you about UBS?
2. Given repeated ethics failures at UBS, who is to blame? The CEO? The board of directors? The
supervising managers? The individuals directly involved? Who should be held accountable? Is it
sufficient just to fine the bank?
3. Given the information provided in this MiniCase, do you think that the 11-year jail sentence for Tom
Hayes was too harsh? Did he serve as a scapegoat? Note: The average jail sentence served for a
person convicted of murder is 17 years in England and Wales.
4. What can UBS do to avoid ethics failures in the future and to repair its damaged reputation?
Endnote
1. Bill Hewlett, HP co-founder, as quoted in Collins, J.C., and Porras, J.I., Built to Last: Successful Habits of
Visionary Companies, New York: HarperCollins, 1994, 1.
2. “Suspicions and spies in Silicon Valley,” Newsweek, September 17, 2006.
3. “How Hewlett-Packard lost its way,” CNN Money, May 8, 2012.
Endnote
1. Bill Hewlett, HP co-founder, as quoted in Collins, J.C., and Porras, J.I., Built to Last: Successful Habits of
Visionary Companies, New York: HarperCollins, 1994, 1.
2. “Suspicions and spies in Silicon Valley,” Newsweek, September 17, 2006.
3. “How Hewlett-Packard lost its way,” CNN Money, May 8, 2012.
Here
1. Identify and write the main issues found discussed in the case
(who, what, how, where and when (the critical facts in a case).
2. List all indicators (including stated "problems") that something is
not as expected or as desired.
3. Briefly analyze the issue with theories found in your textbook or
other academic materials. Decide which ideas, models, and
theories seem useful. Apply these conceptual tools to the
situation. As new information is revealed, cycle back to sub-
steps a and b.
4. Identify the areas that need improvement (use theories from your
textbook)
o Specify and prioritize the criteria used to choose action
alternatives.
Discover or invent feasible action alternatives.
o
o Examine the probable consequences of action alternatives.
o Select a course of action.
o Design and implementation plan/schedule.
o Create a plan for assessing the action to be implemented.
5. Conclusion (every paper should end with a strong conclusion or
summary)
Additional resources:
Stewart, J. 2011. At UBS, It’s the Culture That’s Rogue, New York Times: 23 September,
see: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/24/business/global/at-ubs-its-the-culture-thats-rogue.html?
pagewanted=all&_r=0
Thomasson, E., Bosley, C. 2011. UBS CEO quits, accepts blame for $2.3-billion trading scandal,
Reuters, see: http://business.financialpost.com/2011/09/24/ubs-ceo-quits-accepts-blame-for-2-3-
billion-trading-scandal/
Writing Requirements