UBS Economist Put on Leave After 'Chinese Pig' Comment
June 14 2019 - 9:03AM
Dow Jones News
By Shen Hong and Mike Bird
UBS Group AG placed one of its top economists on leave after a
comment he made earlier this week sparked furor among Chinese
securities professionals.
Paul Donovan, chief economist at UBS Global Wealth Management in
London, made the comment in a podcast earlier this week in a
discussion of rising consumer prices in China and attributed part
of the increase to sick pigs, referring to the impact of African
swine fever on pork prices in the country.
"Does this matter? It matters if you are a Chinese pig. It
matters if you like eating pork in China. It does not really matter
to the rest of the world," he said in the podcast, adding that
China doesn't export a lot of food it produces. The comments were
also in an emailed summary of Mr. Donovan's podcast that was sent
to media outlets and UBS clients on Wednesday.
While pork is widely consumed in China, calling someone "a pig"
in the country is derogatory because it connotes laziness and
stupidity.
UBS and Mr. Donovan issued an apology for his comments the
following day and said the podcast had been removed from
circulation. "I apologize unreservedly for any misunderstanding
caused by my innocently intended comments," Mr. Donovan said on
Thursday, adding that he made the remarks in the context of
pork-price inflation. Some also interpreted his comment as a
reference to sick animals, not a statement about any person.
Mr. Donovan, who has worked at UBS since 1992, didn't reply to a
request for comment. Through a UBS spokesman, Mr. Donovan declined
to comment about the bank's request that he take a leave of
absence.
An open letter dated Thursday from the Chinese Securities
Association of Hong Kong to UBS's board of directors called on the
firm to terminate Mr. Donovan. It also demanded a public apology
and a pledge that similar events wouldn't happen again. The group's
president is Lin Yong, chief executive of Haitong International,
and it represents branches of Chinese securities firms in Hong
Kong.
On Thursday night, Lu Ying, a Shanghai-based director of
research at Haitong Securities, China's third-largest brokerage by
assets, said in a post on Chinese social media WeChat that the
firm's international arm has stopped "all cooperation with UBS" as
a result of the comment. She also recommended that others boycott
the institution.
"Action speaks louder than words," Ms. Lu said in the post. By
late morning Friday, the post had been deleted, according to a
person close to Ms. Lu. Ms. Lu couldn't be reached for comment.
A Haitong International spokeswoman on Friday confirmed that the
firm has "suspended all activities with UBS."
It is unclear how much business Haitong does with UBS. According
to the Chinese firm's banking website, Haitong's investment-banking
arm was a financial adviser to UBS Global Asset Management on an
acquisition of an energy distributor in Portugal earlier this
year.
A UBS spokesman declined to comment on Haitong.
Mr. Donovan's comment also sparked a debate between Chinese
financial professionals on Twitter, over whether the phrasing
should be construed as racist.
"Almost everyone I know who has read this comment is offended,"
wrote Hao Hong, head of research at Bocom International, a
subsidiary of Bank of Communications Co., one of China's largest
banks.
On Friday, the Securities Association of China released a
statement criticizing UBS and Mr. Donovan, calling him an
"unwelcome person." It advised its members -- which include
hundreds of Chinese securities firms -- not to cite his opinions or
invite him to their events.
The group also released a new apology letter from UBS dated
Friday. In it, the bank said it was "deeply sorry" about the
remarks and that it didn't intend to offend Chinese people. UBS
also said it will take steps to educate and train its staff on
issues of sensitivity to other cultures, and review reports more
closely before they are published.
UBS last year was the first foreign bank to get approval from
regulators in China to become the majority owner of a domestic
securities firm. The Swiss bank has since upped its stake in its
Beijing-based UBS Securities Co. joint venture to 51% and has been
adding staff to the business, which is licensed to handle stock and
debt offerings and provide asset management, trading, research and
other services in the country.
--Zhou Wei and Brian Blackstone contributed to this article.
Write to Shen Hong at hong.shen@wsj.com and Mike Bird at
Mike.Bird@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 14, 2019 09:48 ET (13:48 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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