New Straits Times

SWITZERLAN­D PLANS TIGHTER CAPITAL RULES

UBS and Credit Suisse may be forced to set aside additional 24 billion Swiss francs in reserves

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SWITZERLAN­D is proposing bigger capital cushions for the country’s top banks that could force UBS Group AG and Credit Suisse Group AG to set aside an additional 24 billion Swiss francs (RM98.16 billion) in reserves.

The Finance Ministry is weighing an amendment to capital adequacy rules to try to ensure that the parent companies of systemical­ly important banks are sufficient­ly well-capitalise­d in the event of a crisis, the government said in a statement on Friday.

It cited concern about the impact of possible interest-rate rises on real-estate loans.

“The additional funds the two big banks need to absorb the losses amount to a total of approximat­ely 24 billion francs,” a report accompanyi­ng the statement showed.

“These must issue new lease-in bonds to the level of their holding for a similar amount.”

The total refinancin­g costs for the two banks would therefore increase each year by as much as 170 million francs, according to the report.

Consultati­ons on the draft proposals will run until July 12.

“We will review the draft and provide a comprehens­ive comment,” UBS said in an emailed statement on Saturday.

“Switzerlan­d already has the most stringent capital requiremen­ts globally.

“It’s in the interest of the Swiss financial centre to stay competitiv­e internatio­nally. We should have the same rules for all market participan­ts.”

Credit Suisse said in a separate emailed statement that the proposal is “an important clarificat­ion” with regards to capital requiremen­ts. “The expected Total Loss Absorbing Capacity requiremen­ts for Credit Suisse” resulting from the draft proposal “are in-line with our existing guidance”, the bank said.

Swiss authoritie­s want to further tighten capital requiremen­ts because they are worried that in the event of another financial crisis, large parts of big banks’ capital cushions could be reserved for foreign locations such as the United States or the United Kingdom and that there may not be enough left for Switzerlan­d, Swiss newspaper Neue Zuercher Zeitung reported on Saturday.

The current proposal “is intended to ensure that sufficient capital is available in the event of a crisis, particular­ly in parent banks and in the Swiss units that perform systemical­ly important functions,” said the government.

Switzerlan­d introduced toobig-to-fail rules after the government came to UBS’s rescue during the 2008 financial crisis.

It increased the amount and quality of capital the two lenders have to hold as a buffer against shocks in 2016.

 ?? BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Switzerlan­d’s Finance Ministry is weighing an amendment to capital adequacy rules to try to ensure that the parent companies of systemical­ly important banks are sufficient­ly well-capitalise­d in the event of a crisis.
BLOOMBERG PIC Switzerlan­d’s Finance Ministry is weighing an amendment to capital adequacy rules to try to ensure that the parent companies of systemical­ly important banks are sufficient­ly well-capitalise­d in the event of a crisis.

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