Swiss banking giant UBS has achieved a key milestone by obtaining a national banking license from US authorities. This will allow the bank to expand its services for wealthy clients in the US, offering more everyday banking products and strengthening its long-term commitment to the American market.

"This milestone really positions well for the next phase of growth."
"The national bank charter... should help the Swiss bank expand beyond its traditional clientele of the super-rich into a pool of affluent and not-quite-ultrawealthy clients."
UBS has officially shattered a regulatory ceiling that has long constrained its operational flexibility in the world's most lucrative market. In a decisive move announced this Friday, the Swiss banking titan secured a coveted national banking license from the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). This is not merely a bureaucratic checkbox; it is a declaration of intent. By obtaining this charter, UBS transitions from a foreign entity operating through fragmented branches to a fully licensed national player, signaling a massive, long-term commitment to the United States.
Robert Karofsky, President of UBS Americas, wasted no time in highlighting the gravity of this achievement. "This milestone really positions well for the next phase of growth," Karofsky declared, framing the approval as the launchpad for a new era. The application, submitted only last October, was fast-tracked through the Treasury Department's independent bureau, underscoring the bank's determination to solidify its footing. While competitors hesitate, UBS is aggressively cementing the bridge between Zurich and New York, ensuring its infrastructure is as robust as its reputation.
The Swiss giant is pivoting its strategy to capture a broader slice of the American pie. For decades, UBS has been the fortress for the super-rich, but this new license unlocks a critical demographic: the affluent. As noted by The Wall Street Journal, the charter empowers UBS to "expand beyond its traditional clientele of the super-rich into a pool of affluent and not-quite-ultrawealthy clients." This means the bank can now aggressively offer everyday banking essentialsâdemand deposits, checking accounts, and credit productsâthat were previously cumbersome to deploy.
This is a tactical evolution. By integrating simple banking services with high-end wealth management, UBS aims to become the primary financial hub for clients who are wealthy, but perhaps not yet billionaires. Karofsky emphasized that this development offers "significant opportunities" to strengthen the lending and deposit business. The message is clear: UBS is no longer content with just managing investment portfolios; they want to handle the day-to-day liquidity of America's upper crust, deepening client relationships and capturing assets that would otherwise sit in domestic US banks.
North America is not just another market; it is the undisputed engine of global wealth, holding a staggering 42% of the world's personal financial capital. This dwarfs the Asia-Pacific region at 35% and leaves the Europe, Middle East, and Africa region trailing at 21%. UBS knows that to lead globally, it must dominate locally in the US. The stakes are astronomical: in 2025 alone, UBS's wealth management division boasted invested assets totaling an eye-watering $4.753 trillion.
Crucially, the bank revealed that nearly half of these colossal assets are booked within the Americas. This statistic alone justifies the aggressive push for a national license. The US market is the lifeblood of UBS's global strategy. By securing this charter, the bank is fortifying the legal and operational structures protecting trillions in client wealth. This move is about defense as much as offenseâensuring that the platform managing half the bank's entrusted assets is built on the strongest possible regulatory foundation available in the United States.
Despite this regulatory victory, UBS confronts a harsh reality on the ground. The bank is currently grappling with significant headwinds in the Americas, evidenced by a worrying net outflow of $14.1 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025. This financial bleed is compounded by a shrinking workforce, with the bank ending 2025 with approximately 200 fewer US advisors than the previous year. The national license arrives not a moment too soon; it is a critical counter-measure to stem these losses.
Investors remained cautious, with UBS shares dipping 1% following the announcement, reflecting a "show me" attitude from the market. The license provides the tools for growth, but it does not guarantee it. UBS must now leverage this new status to reverse the outflow trend and re-attract top-tier talent. The machinery is now in place, but the execution will define whether this Swiss institution can truly conquer the volatile and competitive landscape of American banking.