<p>The announcement sent UBS AG shares plummeting more than 8 per cent in early trading on the Zurich exchange. By mid-morning shares were down 5 per cent at 10.38 Swiss francs (USD 11.83).<br /><br />The bank provided little information on the incident, saying it was still under investigation. But it said no customer money was affected.<br /><br />"UBS has discovered a loss due to unauthorised trading by a trader in its investment bank," it said in a statement before markets opened.<br /><br />"UBS's current estimate of the loss on the trades is in the range of USD 2 billion," it added. "It is possible that this could lead UBS to report a loss for the third quarter of 2011."<br /><br />A spokesman, Yves Kaufmann, declined to say where the unidentified trader was based, and whether the bank had pressed criminal charges against its employee.<br /><br />Peter Thorne, a London-based equities analyst at Helvea, said the loss was financially manageable for UBS, Switzerland's biggest bank.<br /><br />But he said it was a blow to the reputation of UBS and its management, which oversaw heavy subprime losses during the financial crisis and an embarrassing US tax evasion case in recent years.</p>
<p>The announcement sent UBS AG shares plummeting more than 8 per cent in early trading on the Zurich exchange. By mid-morning shares were down 5 per cent at 10.38 Swiss francs (USD 11.83).<br /><br />The bank provided little information on the incident, saying it was still under investigation. But it said no customer money was affected.<br /><br />"UBS has discovered a loss due to unauthorised trading by a trader in its investment bank," it said in a statement before markets opened.<br /><br />"UBS's current estimate of the loss on the trades is in the range of USD 2 billion," it added. "It is possible that this could lead UBS to report a loss for the third quarter of 2011."<br /><br />A spokesman, Yves Kaufmann, declined to say where the unidentified trader was based, and whether the bank had pressed criminal charges against its employee.<br /><br />Peter Thorne, a London-based equities analyst at Helvea, said the loss was financially manageable for UBS, Switzerland's biggest bank.<br /><br />But he said it was a blow to the reputation of UBS and its management, which oversaw heavy subprime losses during the financial crisis and an embarrassing US tax evasion case in recent years.</p>