The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Credit Suisse crisis has global reach

- By Adela Suliman | Washington Post

Credit Suisse, a behemoth of European banking with assets stretching across the globe, is experienci­ng turbulence.

Earlier this week, Credit Suisse disclosed “material weaknesses” in its financial reporting this week and it was unclear whether the major bank would be able to get a financial rescue. That sent markets into panic. But a $53.7 billion liquidity lifeline from Switzerlan­d’s central bank appeared to be calming European investors as markets rallied Thursday.

Credit Suisse’s troubles come in the wake of Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse less than a week ago. SVB’S failure, for many people, appeared to come out of nowhere.

Two banking crises, just days apart, on two different continents, sparked concern over whether there could be a broader contagion that mirrored the global financial crisis of 2008.

Here’s what you need to know.

What has happened at Credit Suisse?

The 167-year-old Credit Suisse, with its origins as a bank for the ultrawealt­hy elite, on Tuesday announced in its annual report it had uncovered “material weaknesses” relating to its financial reporting. This sent shares plummeting and sparked jitters across global financial markets as nervous investors rushed to limit their exposure. Credit Suisse said it was working to address its problems, which could require it to “expend significan­t resources.”

To calm investors, the Swiss National Bank issued a statement alongside the country’s main financial regulator, known

as FINMA, stating “if necessary,” it would provide Credit Suisse with liquidity, which it subsequent­ly did to the tune of $53.7 billion. Credit Suisse also said it would buy back up to $3 billion worth of debt.

How is Saudi Arabia involved?

The Saudi National Bank is Credit Suisse’s largest investor, after acquiring an almost 10% stake in the bank last year.

Asked if the Saudis would be willing to

buttress the bank with more funds, Chairman Ammar Al Khudairy told Bloomberg TV on Wednesday: “The answer is absolutely not — for many reasons,” compoundin­g Credit Suisse’s problems.

He said the Saudi stake was currently 9.8% and ownership over 10% would activate a host of higher regulatory and statutory rules. “We’re not inclined to get into a new regulatory regime,” he added.

Is this connected to the Silicon Valley Bank collapse?

Credit Suisse’s latest troubles are unconnecte­d to those that brought down Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and Signature Bank of New York, less than a week ago. However, the failure of SVB — marking the second-biggest bank failure in U.S. history — rattled markets and created a bleak financial outlook as investors remain fearful of a contagion after learning of Credit Suisse’s announceme­nt this week.

Credit Suisse is also much larger and more integrated with the global financial system than SVB, making any meltdown more far reaching and signaling that the banking-sector issues are not confined to U.S. banks. But Credit Suisse has substantia­lly more liquid assets than SVB and is labeled a “Global Systemical­ly Important Bank (G-SIB)” — meaning it is subject to significan­tly higher standards for capital, funding, liquidity and leverage requiremen­ts.

Is this as bad as the 2008 financial crisis?

No.

Unlike Lehman Brothers, which collapsed suddenly in 2008 as people recognized the size of its off-book liabilitie­s and businesses, Credit Suisse’s troubles do not yet appear as critical, although it has struggled to restructur­e.

The liquidity lifeline from the national bank on Thursday boosted shares more than 30%, signaling the crisis may be contained as investors feel reassured.

 ?? AP ?? The 167-year-old Credit Suisse, with origins as a bank for the ultrawealt­hy, announced Tuesday in its annual report it uncovered “material weaknesses” relating to its financial reporting,sparking jitters across global markets.
AP The 167-year-old Credit Suisse, with origins as a bank for the ultrawealt­hy, announced Tuesday in its annual report it uncovered “material weaknesses” relating to its financial reporting,sparking jitters across global markets.

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