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Credit Suisse ditches Swiss unit IPO

Announces $4bn rights offering

- JOSHUA FRANKLIN

ZURICH: Credit Suisse Group AG has ditched plans to raise money by listing part of its Swiss business and will instead sell new shares worth about four billion Swiss francs ($4 billion) to get its financial strength back on a par with rivals.

Switzerlan­d’s second-biggest bank, which is recovering from back-to-back annual losses as it restructur­es under chief executive Tidjane Thiam, said the decision should remove any lingering concerns about its capital strength.

“It’s the right move, even if I would have preferred it not to be necessary,” said Thomas Braun, fund manager at Classic Fund Management, a top 30 Credit Suisse shareholde­r.

The four billion franc rights issue follows a four billion franc cash call in late 2015 and asset sales that raised about one billion francs in capital. It will be the last leg of Credit Suisse’s plans to raise the 9-11 billion francs Thiam said it needed when he announced his revamp in October 2015.

“Is there something on top of that? The short answer is ‘no’,” Thiam, who became CEO in July 2015, told reporters.

The cash call follows similar capital increases by German rival Deutsche Bank AG and Italy’s UniCredit SpA this year

and should benefit from a rally in bank stocks after polls showed French far-right candidate Marine Le Pen would lose a presidenti­al run-off on May 7.

Reuters reported last month that Credit Suisse was considerin­g a share sale rather than an initial public offering (IPO) of its Swiss banking division and was set to make a decision in April.

Scrapping the IPO means Credit Suisse will not have to sacrifice some of the profits from one of its most lucrative divisions and will avoid the operationa­l complexiti­es of having a separate listed entity within a global bank.

“I’m glad they’re not selling the Swiss bank as that would have weakened the overall business and raising equity is simpler and cleaner,” said David Hussey, fund manager at Manulife Asset Management.

Credit Suisse has lost 5.65 billion francs since 2015 as Thiam focuses on expanding its wealth management business while shrinking its investment bank, a shift the Swiss bank expects will lead to more than 10,000 job losses.

The bank’s management is also fighting an investor protest over high executive pay that is set to come to a head at its annual meeting on Friday while the Netherland­s is leading an investigat­ion into alleged tax evasion and money laundering involving the bank.

Still, clarity on its plans for raising capital, as well as better-than-expected first-quarter numbers, pushed shares in Credit Suisse up as much as 3.7% to their highest since March 3. The shares were trading 1.9% higher at 1135 GMT.

The bank reported net profit of 596 million francs for the first three months of 2017, its highest quarterly profit since Thiam launched his sweeping restructur­ing and ahead of even the highest estimate in a Reuters poll of analysts.

Credit Suisse expects to have a common equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio, a closely watched measure of balance sheet strength, of approximat­ely 13.4% following the four billion franc capital increase. By comparison, Deutsche Bank expects to achieve a CET1 ratio of 14% through its cash call and Swiss rival UBS AG is just shy of 14%.

While some analysts reckoned the debate about the bank’s capital position had finally been put to rest others remained concerned it might not be the last cash call.

“How can a bank as big as Credit Suisse be so volatile in terms of its earnings and unpredicta­ble as to how much capital it needs? They are being forced to adjust quarter by quarter,” said Chirantan Barua, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein. “This may not be the last capital raise.”

The bank will hold an extraordin­ary general meeting on May 18 for shareholde­rs to vote on the capital increase.

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