Daily Mail

Credit Suisse hit by £74bn of withdrawal­s

- By Lucy White

CReDIT suisse clients have pulled billions of pounds out of the troubled bank in just over a month as fears over its future mounted.

On yet another grim day for the beleaguere­d lender, bosses revealed £74bn was withdrawn between the end of september and November 11.

This included £56bn from the wealth management arm and £ 4.6bn from the domestic swiss bank as concern spread beyond internatio­nal clients to those at home.

The figures were published as Credit suisse warned it was on course to make losses of £1.3bn in the fourth quarter, leaving it £3bn in the red over the full year.

The bank, which is drasticall­y trying to shake up its structure following its involvemen­t in a string of scandals, said the flows of money leaving in the first two weeks of October ‘substantia­lly exceeded the rates incurred in the third quarter of 2022’.

When it unveiled its thirdquart­er results earlier this month, it blamed the desertion on ‘ negative press and social media coverage based on incorrect rumours’.

Withdrawal­s had since slowed, it added yesterday.

But Credit suisse’s reputation has been battered by its role in a series of scandals, from a spying debacle and its former chairman’s flouting of Covid rules, to the collapses of financial services company Greensill and hedge fund Archegos Capital.

yesterday, the bank gained approval from its shareholde­rs to push ahead with a £3.5bn fundraisin­g designed to secure its future. Chairman Axel lehmann said the vote by shareholde­rs ‘marks a further important step in our journey to build the new Credit suisse’. He added that the approval ‘confirms confidence in the strategy, as we presented it in October, and we are fully focused on delivering our strategic priorities to lay the foundation for future profitable growth’.

Credit suisse last month said that saudi Arabia’s biggest bank was backing its fundraisin­g. It said it would also cut costs by 15pc, axing 9,000 of its 52,000 staff over the next three years including 2,700 in 2022.

It plans to slim down its beleaguere­d investment bank, reviving the Cs First Boston brand which it first acquired in 1988 and hiving off its dealmaking and advisory business under this name.

yesterday, Credit suisse said its investment bank in particular had been ‘impacted by the substantia­l industry- wide slowdown in capital markets and reduced activity in the sales and trading businesses’.

Kian Abouhossei­n, an analyst at JP Morgan, said the bank was ‘not out of the woods yet in terms of stabilisin­g the franchise’.

‘Not out of the woods yet’

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