Swiss regulator defends controversial $17 billion writedown of Credit Suisse bonds

Swiss regulator defends controversial  billion writedown of Credit Suisse bonds

Axel Lehmann, chairman of Credit Suisse Group AG, Colm Kelleher, chairman of UBS Group AG, Karin Keller-Sutter, Switzerland’s finance minister, Alain Berset, Switzerland’s president, Thomas Jordan, president of the Swiss National Bank (SNB), Marlene Amstad, chairperson of the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA), left to right, during a news conference in Bern, Switzerland, on Sunday, March 19, 2023.

Pascal Mora | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Swiss regulator FINMA on Thursday defended its decision to instruct Credit Suisse to write down its AT1 bonds — a controversial part of the lender’s emergency sale to UBS — saying it was a “viability event.”

The regulator said the loan Credit Suisse received from the Swiss National Bank last week, backed by the federal government, meant the conditions for a writedown had been met.

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The regulator instructed Credit Suisse to write down 16 billion Swiss francs of AT1 bonds, widely regarded as relatively risky investments, to zero, while equity shareholders will receive payouts at the stock’s takeover value.

This decision upended the usual European hierarchy of restitution in the event of a bank failure under the post-financial crisis Basel III framework, which ordinarily places AT1 bondholders above stock investors. Bondholders are exploring legal action over the contentious writedown.

“The AT1 instruments issued by Credit Suisse contractually provide that they will be completely written down in a ‘viability event,’ in particular if extraordinary government support is granted,” FINMA said in a statement Thursday.

“As Credit Suisse received extraordinary liquidity assistance loans secured by a federal default guarantee on 19 March 2023, these contractual conditions were met for the AT1 instruments issued by the bank.”

After its share price plunged to an all-time low last week, Credit Suisse announced that it had secured a loan of up to 50 billion Swiss francs from the Swiss National Bank, and provided substantial liquidity assistance to the lender as authorities scrambled to put together a rescue deal on Sunday.

The Swiss federal government enacted an emergency ordinance to guarantee the additional liquidity assistance from the SNB to Credit Suisse, in order to ensure the successful implementation of the UBS takeover.

The ordinance also authorized FINMA to “order the borrower and the financial group to write down Additional Tier 1 capital,” the regulator said Thursday.

“On Sunday, a solution could be found to protect clients, the financial centre and the markets,” said FINMA CEO Urban Angehrn.

“In this context, it is important that CS’s banking business continues to function smoothly and without interruption. That is now the case.”

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