The Free Press Journal

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INDIAN MONEY IN SWISS BANKS UP 50% IN 2017

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Money parked by Indians in Swiss banks rose over 50 per cent to CHF 1.01 billion (Rs 7,000 crore) in 2017, reversing a three-year downward trend amid India's clampdown on suspected black money stashed there.

In comparison, the total funds held by all foreign clients of Swiss banks rose about 3 per cent to CHF 1.46 trillion or about Rs 100 lakh crore in 2017, according to the official annual data released by the Swiss National Bank, the central banking authority of the Alpine nation.

The surge in Indian money held with Swiss banks comes as a surprise given India's continuing clampdown on suspected black money stashed abroad, including in banks of Switzerlan­d that used to be known for their famed secrecy walls for years.

The Indian money in Swiss banks had fallen by 45 per cent in 2016, marking their biggest ever yearly plunge, to CHF 676 million (about Rs 4,500 crore) -- the lowest ever since the European nation began making the data public in 1987.

According to the SNB data, the total funds held by Indians directly with Swiss banks rose to 999 million Swiss franc (Rs 6,891 crore) in 2017, while the same held through fiduciarie­s or wealth managers increased to CHF 16.2 million (Rs 112 crore). These figures stood at CHF 664.8 million and CHF 11 million, respective­ly, at the end of 2016.

As per the latest data, the Indian money in

Swiss banks included customer deposits, transfers through other banks and 'other liabilitie­s' such as securities. The funds under all three heads have risen sharply, as against a huge plunge across all categories in the previous year.

The total funds held by Indians with Swiss banks stood at a record high of CHF 6.5 billion (Rs 23,000 crore) at 2006-end, but came down to nearly one-tenth of that level in about a decade. Since those record levels, this is only the third time when there has been a rise in Indians' money in Swiss banks -- in 2011 (12 per cent), 2013 (43 per cent) and now in 2017 by 50.2 per cent -- the maximum increase since 56 per cent way back in 2004.

The latest data from Zurich-based SNB comes months after a new framework was put in place for automatic exchange of informatio­n.

The funds, described by SNB as 'liabilitie­s' of Swiss banks or 'amounts due to' their clients, are the official figures disclosed by the Swiss authoritie­s and do not indicate to the quantum of the much-debated alleged black money held by Indians there.

Amid a decline seen in Indian money over the previous three years, there was a view that Indians who had allegedly parked their illicit money in Swiss banks in the past may have shifted the funds to other locations after a global crackdown began on the mighty banking secrecy practices in Switzerlan­d.

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