Indo-Swiss Business   I  Bi-Monthly I Issue:Jul-Aug 2008
   

   
.STRATEGY
 
   
 
UBS & Credit Suisse Need to Set Aside $68 bn to
Stall Another Subprime Crisis

Swiss banks UBS and Credit Suisse would have to set aside 70 billion Swiss francs (43.5 billion euros, 68.3 billion dollars) more in company capital as Switzerland's banking watchdog moves to prevent a repeat of the subprime crisis, a Swiss newspaper has reported recently.

The newspaper Sonntag quoted a parliamentarian Hans Kaufmann as saying that the Federal Banking Commission would require additional provisions of "40 billion francs for UBS and 30 billion francs for Credit Suisse".

Banking commission spokesman Alain Bichsel confirmed that a sum had been proposed and that the banks have until the end of summer to put forward their positions.

"We would issue the definitive provision in autumn," he told the newspaper.

Both banks have been hard-hit by the US subprime mortgage crisis, with UBS writing down over $37 billion in assets and Credit Suisse with around 10 billion Swiss francs in write-down since the onset of the crisis.

The Banking Commission and the Swiss Central Bank had earlier said that one of the safeguards that should be put in place would be a higher capital base.

Philipp Hildebrand, who is vice-chairman of the Swiss Central Bank's Governing Board, said recently that a higher capital requirement was needed.

He also suggested the introduction of a so-called leverage ratio which would put a limit on leverage to stop banks from over-leveraging their assets.

Meanwhile, another Swiss newspaper, Sonntagszeitung has said that the commission had already sent its proposal of new regulations to the banks.

Credit Suisse, however, has warned against these new measures.

The bank's spokesman Alex Biscaro told Sonntagszeitung that "measures must be targeted at the actual problems, and from our point of view, the leverage ratio and capital buffers are not the case.”