Oman Daily Observer

UBS and Credit Suisse bow to regulator pressure on dividends

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ZURICH: Swiss banks UBS and Credit Suisse will postpone paying out part of their 2019 dividends until later this year after mounting pressure from authoritie­s over lenders’ payouts during the coronaviru­s epidemic.

The move follows bank dividend cancellati­ons or postponeme­nts across much of Europe as regulators have heaped pressure on lenders to conserve profits and capital in order to assist the economy.

The two banks were the remaining major European lenders to resist requests to change their dividend policy. But they stopped short of steps taken by British and euro zone banks who have either suspended or canceled all their 2019 payouts.

Switzerlan­d’s two biggest banks said their strong capital and liquidity positions would have allowed them to support the Swiss economy and their clients in the crisis while also paying out their dividends, but were bowing to requests from Swiss financial markets watchdog FINMA.

“Our financial strength well above regulatory requiremen­ts and prudent risk management allow us to deliver on our current capital returns policy,” UBS Chairman Axel Weber said in a statement. “Neverthele­ss, at FINMA’S request, we have adjusted the 2019 dividend payout proposal given the high and unpreceden­ted uncertaint­y.”

The regulator had warned banks not to pay out dividends in order to conserve capital to lend to companies during an economic downturn caused by coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. It toughened its stance last week by blocking upcoming dividend payments from capital relief measures.

“We believe that this response to FINMA’S request, in alignment with the similar decisions made by our peers, is a prudent and responsibl­e step,” Credit Suisse said.

Both Credit Suisse and UBS are participat­ing in a Swiss government emergency loan scheme to support businesses hit by the pandemic. UBS said it had already provided 2.1 billion

Swiss francs ($2.2 billion) in liquidity to more than 16,000 mostly smalland medium-sized companies.

UBS also offered a sweetener to investors, saying it expected on April 28 to report a rise in first-quarter net profit to around $1.5 billion from $1.1 billion a year ago. Credit Suisse confirmed upbeat trading updates given last month.

UBS said it intended to pay out its dividend of $0.73 in two installmen­ts, half of it as a regular dividend and the rest as a special dividend — to be separately approved by shareholde­rs on November 19 — after the publicatio­n of its third-quarter results.

 ?? — AFP ?? Workers are seen in scaffoldin­g infront of Credit Suisse bulding in Zurich.
— AFP Workers are seen in scaffoldin­g infront of Credit Suisse bulding in Zurich.

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