UBS Group AG filings document the formal disclosures of a Swiss foreign private issuer that reports annual information on Form 20-F and current information on Form 6-K. The records cover IFRS financial statements, consolidated capitalization, debt issued, additional tier 1 capital instruments, TLAC-eligible senior unsecured debt, and regulatory capital treatment under the Swiss systemically relevant bank framework.
UBS filings also describe governance and corporate-structure matters, including Articles of Association, share capital, general meeting procedures, board and executive bodies, auditor provisions, compensation votes and annual general meeting agenda items. Additional filings include Pillar 3 risk disclosures, sustainability reporting, registration-statement disclosures for securities offerings, and regulatory capital communications involving UBS Group AG and UBS AG.
UBS Group AG’s Form 6-K provides a detailed snapshot of its loss-absorbing capital stack as of 30 June 2025. Under the Swiss SRB rules the Group shows USD 19.0 bn of high-trigger Additional Tier 1 (AT1) capital across 20 perpetual issues, the largest being two USD-denominated USD 1.75 bn notes issued in November 2023. Tier 2 capital is minimal at USD 196 m, consisting mainly of legacy non-Basel III instruments that roll off in 2025-29.
The bulk of the bail-in buffer is TLAC-eligible senior unsecured debt of USD 99.3 bn spread over 130+ issues in multiple currencies and maturities out to 2055; USD- and EUR-denominated notes dominate, with the single largest line a USD 3.25 bn bond due May 2032. Instruments remain TLAC-eligible until one year before contractual maturity; several 2025-26 maturities (e.g., USD 2.5 bn 24 Sep 2025) will exit eligibility within the next 12 months.
The table also reflects that, following the 12 June 2023 merger with Credit Suisse Group AG, legacy CS obligations are now UBS obligations, though non-Basel III CS Tier 2 notes do not count toward gone-concern capacity. All figures are amortised face amounts adjusted for own-credit effects; totals may not sum due to rounding.