Submitted by giteam t3_11wmpq4 in dataisbeautiful
Comments
killerparrot6 t1_jcyv6wz wrote
They won't be 3rd anymore after they realize losses from all the horrible swaps CS was engaged in..
[deleted] t1_jczzamz wrote
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[deleted] t1_jd0vtai wrote
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LittleOneInANutshell t1_jd6dxpo wrote
Not to mention that AUM is not technically neither income nor wealth. It's just money they invest and return. The money can be taken out anytime and is owned by oligarchs.
Personal_Problems_99 t1_jd1e8fp wrote
I mean... There's such things as puts and calls you know. If you sell them that asset is indeed worth something. Depending on the asset of course.
[deleted] t1_jczmw11 wrote
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snoosh00 t1_jczux8y wrote
Something something too big to fail.
TouchGrassRedditor t1_jd07rki wrote
Assets under management isn’t the same as ownership. The investors who own these funds could move them anywhere at any time
[deleted] t1_jd08e1l wrote
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Real_Jackraps t1_jd0dmyi wrote
People smarter than you exist in case you haven't experienced it before.
[deleted] t1_jd14n9d wrote
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TouchGrassRedditor t1_jd08qv7 wrote
You know that literally every economic sector and every possible risk profile is represented across the trillions that these firms manage, right? Blackrock doesn’t put 100% of its client’s assets into the same stock lmao, it’s small cap, mid cap, large cap, international, and everything else
chillord t1_jd084f6 wrote
Just from a semi-layman perspective: BlackRock is a company that's dishing out a ton of ETFs like the MSCI World. So they have these assets "in management" but actually just buy the underlying shares and earn management fees. There isn't really any risk involved for this type of business since it's 100% collaterized.
To gain a full perspective, we would need to see a diagram that explains in detail which asset classes are managed and how the percentages add up.
giteam OP t1_jcyp6de wrote
UBS knocked Fidelity Investments off the podium with their acquisition of Credit Suisse, bringing their total assets under management (AUM) to $5.9T - over 7x the GDP of Switzerland.
Sources: ADVRatings Reuters
Tools: Figma
uragayretard t1_jcznmxr wrote
What's figma?
garflesnarks t1_jczqxg1 wrote
Figma balls!
sd_slate t1_jd1sgsa wrote
It's a design tool rather than data visualization tool
lostcauz707 t1_jd06mcx wrote
The hilarity being they are all banking on getting bailed out as they continue to lose assets and market confidence.
brock_h t1_jd0in32 wrote
Schwab has 7T+ AUM. What am I missing?
knightsone43 t1_jd30r5v wrote
Total Client Assets vs Assets Under Management
rajhm t1_jd2da0g wrote
I am guessing for that number, Schwab is the brokerage, not the asset manager. At Schwab's brokerage people have money in stocks, ETFs, mutual funds, bonds, etc. Some of the funds and ETFs are like iShares ETFs and contributing to Blackrock's AUM number.
Basically for the number being quoted, Blackrock has voting rights for the stock shares portion of that AUM. Schwab only has the same for those invested in Schwab's own funds.
geos1234 t1_jd0plde wrote
Small distinction, UBS’ wealth management arm is huge. Their asset management arm is comparatively small. Wealth management and asset management are two separate businesses, with wealth management generally catering towards wealthy individuals whereas asset management caters to institutions like endowments, pension funds etc…
laserdruckervk t1_jd0epvi wrote
American Billion is German Milliarde and American Trillion is German Billion and it confuses the hell out of me
ICanFlyLikeAFly t1_jd0kuic wrote
The problem is there is a long and short system. Even in English - but it's not used anymore.
1 milionen x1 000 = 1 milliarden 1 millionen x 1 000 000 1 billonen 1 billonen x 1 000= 1billarden 1 billonen x 1 000 000 = 1 trillionen
jonny_wow t1_jd1cugx wrote
Okay but CS's portfolio is toxic enough to wipe out all of UBS's worth a million times over.
Cooperativism62 t1_jd45syx wrote
What's so toxic about it? I haven't read the reports yet on what caused the failure and none of the headlines hint either.
jonny_wow t1_jd4bi5r wrote
They tried to naked short sell Gamestop into bankruptcy and the gamers fought them and won, now CS has bad positions open that nobody in the world can afford, so the only play they have is to keep opening shittier and shittier positions every day until the world runs out of money.
[deleted] t1_jd546r8 wrote
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curiosity-12 t1_jd0wrjj wrote
Why is it relevant to compare a stock (assets under management) to a flow (Swiss GDP)? Perhaps a more relevant comparison would be the assets of a large pension fund (eg Calpers).
Cooperativism62 t1_jd45mo3 wrote
Because if the Swiss government acted as dealer of last resort, buying up the assets under management, then Swiss dept to GDP ratio skyrockets.
So yes, it is good to compare a stock (like a lambo) to a flow (your income) in the event of a purchase.
curiosity-12 t1_jd4fd1b wrote
Point taken and hadn’t considered that. Would it then make sense to show that comparison? I don’t know if the amounts represented benchmark favorably or unfavorably against other countries.
Cooperativism62 t1_jd4irli wrote
Data representation always comes with pros and cons, it's rarely perfect.
I think its fair as a simple respresentation to show their assets and compare them to Swiss GPD since the Swiss government may eventually play a role through a bailout, and I believe that's what OP is implying. Obviously you can and should do deeper analysis, like cross-country comparisons and so on, but hey, this is r/dataisbeatiful not "thisismyPHDthesis".
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LinCashew t1_jd1dpum wrote
Vanguard is simply great, i rarely see ETFs from the others being able to compete with the low cost that Vanguard offers.
knightsone43 t1_jd30vpw wrote
Fidelity, Vanguard and Schwab all leading the way
eierwerfer t1_jd2e519 wrote
CH will split up the new bank in the upcoming years 🇨🇭
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tilapios t1_jcz3ad3 wrote
Your infographic says "UBS and Credit Suisse together hold combined assets of over 7x Swiss GDP", but the Reuters article you link to says "The banks, two of the most systemically relevant in global finance, hold combined assets of up to 140% of Swiss gross domestic product..."
I think this is because you're using assets under management and total assets interchangeably, which doesn't seem correct. UBS's 2022 annual report lists its total assets as $1.1 trillion, which is different from the $4.5 trillion of assets that it manages.