UBS agrees to buy Credit Suisse in €3bn deal to avert global banking crisis

Swiss government has forced through the takeover of stricken bank Credit Suisse by rival

UBS agreed to buy Credit Suisse for €3 billion on Sunday after a frantic weekend of negotiations brokered by Swiss regulators to safeguard its banking system and attempt to prevent a crisis spreading across global financial markets.

The historic deal follows five days in which the Swiss establishment raced to end a deepening crisis at Credit Suisse that threatened to topple the country’s second-largest lender.

An emergency SFr50 billion (€50.5 billion) credit line provided by the Swiss National Bank on Wednesday failed to arrest a steep decline in the share price, which was exacerbated by wider market turmoil caused by the sudden collapse earlier this month of California-based Silicon Valley Bank.

“On Friday the liquidity outflows and market volatility showed it was no longer possible to restore market confidence, and a swift and stabilising solution was absolutely necessary,” Swiss president Alain Berset said at a press conference in Bern on Sunday evening. “This solution was the takeover of Credit Suisse by UBS.”

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UBS will pay about 76 Swiss centimes a share in its own stock, worth SFr3 billion (€3.03 billion), up from a bid of SFr0.25 earlier on Sunday worth around €1 billion that was rejected by the Credit Suisse board. However, the offer remains far below Credit Suisse’s closing price of SFr1.86 on Friday.

As part of the deal, the Swiss National Bank (SNB) has agreed to offer a SFr100 billion liquidity line backed by a federal default guarantee to UBS, the Swiss finance ministry said. The government is also providing a loss guarantee of up to SFr9 billion, but only after UBS has borne the first SFr5 billion of losses on certain portfolios of assets.

The combination creates one of the biggest banks in Europe. UBS has $1.1 trillion of total assets on its balance sheet and Credit Suisse has $575 billion.

“This is no bailout. This is a commercial solution,” said Swiss finance minister Karin Keller-Sutter. “The bankruptcy would have had huge collateral damage on the Swiss financial market and with a risk of contagion internationally.

“The US and UK were very grateful for this solution ... they really feared a bankruptcy of Credit Suisse,” she added.

The takeover means the end for the 167-year-old bank whose headquarters faces its fierce rival UBS across Zurich’s Paradeplatz square.

It caps a calamitous few years for Credit Suisse marked by twin crises linked to specialist finance group Greensill Capital and family office Archegos in 2021 resulted in billions of dollars of losses and severely damaged the bank’s reputation for risk management.

Under the terms of the deal, some SFr16 billion of Credit Suisse’s Additional Tier 1 capital bonds, which are designed to take losses when institutions run into trouble and to transfer the risk of a bank failure from taxpayers to investors, are being wiped out. Credit Suisse said in its statement on Sunday evening that Swiss market regulator Finma had determined the bonds would “be written off to zero”. Around SFr1 billion of other capital was also written off.

The Swiss federal council – the executive arm of government – will issue an emergency ordnance to waive regulatory and governance hurdles to the swift closing of the transaction. Swiss parliamentarians will also eventually have to approve the process – albeit retrospectively; a vote will be held within the next six months.

Credit Suisse chief executive Ulrich Körner had been unable to draw a line under the bank’s crises during his eight-month tenure, with a restructuring plan that included spinning off its investment bank and cutting 9,000 jobs failing to convince investors.

Customers withdrew SFr111 billion from the group in the final three months of last year. Deposit outflows from Credit Suisse topped SFr10 billion a day late last week, the Financial Times has previously reported.

Shares in Credit Suisse are down more than 74 per cent over the past year, leaving its market capitalisation on Friday at just $8 billion, dwarfed by the roughly $57 billion market cap of UBS.

For UBS, the deal cements its position as the world’s largest wealth manager, with operations spanning the US, Europe, the Middle East and Asia. The combined entity will have $5 trillion of invested assets globally.

“UBS will remain rock solid,” said UBS chairman, Corkman Colm Kelleher, who will continue to lead the combined entity with chief executive Ralph Hamers.

Mr Kelleher said that Credit Suisse’s Swiss division was “a fine asset that we are very determined to keep” and that it was too early to give an estimate of job cuts across the various divisions UBS is acquiring.

In 2022, UBS made $7.6 billion of profit while Credit Suisse slumped to a $7.9 billion loss, effectively wiping out the entire previous decade’s earnings – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2023