UBS to cut 3,500 jobs worldwide

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UBS has not been helped by a strong Swiss franc

Swiss banking group UBS has announced it is to cut 3,500 jobs globally as part of its cost savings programme.

Some 45% of the job losses will fall on its investment bank.

The move was widely anticipated after the banking group announced plans last month to find 2bn Swiss francs ($2.5bn, £1.5bn) of annual savings.

The bank said, external it would meet its savings target by 2013 through redundancies and natural attrition, as well as via rationalisation of its properties.

Last month, UBS reported a 49% drop in quarterly profit - worse than expected - after business was hit by weaker trading and the high value of the Swiss currency.

Since then, the Swiss franc - a popular haven for investors worried by poor growth prospects in the US and Europe - has strengthened even further.

UBS expected the restructuring to result in upfront costs of 550m Swiss francs.

"Of the expected... redundancies, approximately 45% will come from the investment bank, 35% from wealth management and Swiss bank, 10% from global asset management, and 10% from wealth management Americas," the bank said in its statement.

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