By Joshua Franklin and Angelika Gruber
ZURICH (Reuters) - UBS increased reserves for penalties tied to mis-selling residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) by more than $400 million to $1.405 billion as it posted an 11 percent rise in third-quarter pre-tax profit.
The Swiss bank made the disclosure in its quarterly report on Friday, following news last month that the U.S. Department of Justice had demanded a $14 billion fine from Deutsche Bank in a similar investigation.
This was far more than analysts had expected and prompted fears UBS, the world's biggest wealth manager, could also face a stiffer penalty.
UBS's pre-tax profit for the three months to end-September rose 11 percent year on year to 877 million Swiss francs ($883 million), ahead of market forecasts, thanks to a strong business in the Swiss market and cost cuts.
Nevertheless, UBS maintained its gloomy outlook amid negative interest rates in Switzerland, cautious client activity and economic uncertainty.
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"These conditions are unlikely to change in the foreseeable future," UBS said in a statement.
The bank's shares were indicated 1.8 percent higher in pre-market business.
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UBS did not benefit from the same surge in investment banking revenues experienced by U.S. banks since its business is more geared towards equities, and Wall Street earnings were boosted by bond trading.
It is the downside to UBS's widely lauded post-financial crisis strategy to focus on capital-light wealth management while scaling back in investment banking and fixed income, where earnings are more volatile and which consume more capital.
In the tough environment, UBS's flagship wealth management saw a sixth straight quarter of falling or stagnating gross margins. But the division's net margin - which factors in cost savings - rose slightly to 27 basis points.
Net profit fell to 827 million francs from 2.1 billion francs in the same quarter last year, which had benefited from a net tax benefit of 1.3 billion francs.
Net new money inflows - a volatile but important indicator of future earnings in private banking - totalled 9.4 billion francs at its wealth management unit and $800 million at its wealth management business in the Americas.
UBS saw a positive impact from deferred tax assets (DTAs) of 424 million francs, the bulk of the roughly 500 million the bank had guided for in 2016. DTAs are tax breaks from losses suffered in the financial crisis.
The bank's common equity tier 1 capital ratio, an important measure of balance sheet strength which UBS uses as a benchmark for its dividend, fell to 14.0 percent from 14.2 percent due to a slight rise in risk-weighted assets.
Chief Executive Sergio Ermotti told CNBC the bank's focus is on delivering the same ordinary dividend as in 2015 of 0.60 francs per share.
UBS said Hong Kong's regulator was investigating the bank's role as sponsor of some initial public offerings.
($1 = 0.9932 Swiss francs)
(Editing by Michael Shields and Alexander Smith)
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