Union Bank of Switzerland (UBS) Interview Practice Test

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1 / 20

What is the yield curve and how can it affect UBS business lines?

A plot of interest rates by maturity; slope reflects market expectations and influences pricing, discount rates, and investment valuations across divisions.

The yield curve is a plot of interest rates across different maturities for bonds with similar credit quality. Its slope—whether rates rise with longer maturities, stay flat, or invert—reflects market expectations about future rates, inflation, and economic growth. This expectation guides how UBS prices loans and deposits, how it discounts future cash flows for valuation, and how it manages risk across its businesses.

For lending and funding, the curve helps determine the cost of funds by term and how loan pricing should adjust as rates move. A steeper curve can affect net interest margins differently for assets and liabilities, influencing decisions on balance-sheet composition and product pricing. In asset and liability management, the curve is used to model cash flows, value fixed-income assets, and set hedges with rate derivatives. In investment banking and trading, it underpins the valuation of debt and the pricing of interest-rate–related products, with portfolio value sensitive to moves along the curve. In wealth management, the curve informs long-term client planning and discount-rate assumptions for future cash flows.

So, the yield curve matters across UBS because it shapes pricing, discounting, and valuations, and drives risk management across lending, funding, trading, and client advisory activities.

A graph of stock prices by sector

A chart of exchange rates for currencies

Inflation by quarter

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