Huw Jenkins

[4] After UBS began to suffer losses in the subprime mortgage crisis Jenkins stepped down to an advisory role in October 2007.

After leaving UBS Investment Bank in 2008, Huw Jenkins purchased a farm in Tuscany and spent his time "farming olives, producing an annual 5,000 litres of olive oil, even selling it alongside his wife from a stall on King’s Road in London’s Chelsea district".

[5] In 2013 Jenkins and other UBS executives gave evidence on Libor rigging to the UK Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards.

Jenkins served as chairman of Great Ormond Street Hospital children's charity, the Tick Tock Club, from 2009 to 2012, as a member of Liverpool University Development Foundation from 2010 to 2014 and vice-chairman of the London Business School's capital campaign from 2014 to 2016.

"[11][12] Huw Jenkins stated in his testimony that "It [Libor fixing] was a very engrained part of the business areas, so it would not surprise me if it was going on before that [for many years].

He rejected the charge of incompetence and pointed out that several investigations, including those led by the U.S. Department of Justice and U.K. Financial Standards Authority, had concluded he had no knowledge of the practice of rate rigging.

[17][18] Ivic claimed he had played a key role in Banco BTG Pactual SA's IPO, raising funds from nine entities, including the China Investment Corporation, GIC Private Limited, as well as the Agnelli and Rothschild families, for which he was promised a partnership and shares.

[26] Suffering financial constraints linked to the credit crisis, UBS put Pactual up for sale in 2009 as part of an effort to reduce its risk profile and improve its balance sheet.

[34] BTG Pactual announced February 22, 2016 that it had entered into a definitive agreement under which EFG International would acquire BSI.

Huw Jenkins at the Financial Times CNBC Davos Nightcap, 26 January 2012