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Credit Suisse is in crisis. What went wrong?

Myriam Balezou
Myriam Balezou • 5 min read
Credit Suisse is in crisis. What went wrong?
The cost of insuring the bank’s bonds against default for one year has surged to levels not seen for major international banks since the Global Financial Crisis of 2008 / Photo: Bloomberg
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Switzerland’s role as banker to the world’s rich is built on a reputation for institutional discretion and dull reliability. That only makes the scandals, public legal battles and mounting losses at Credit Suisse Group more striking and hard to comprehend. In mid-March, unease about the bank’s mounting problems snowballed and its shares slumped, pushing the lender to borrow as much as CHF50 billion ($73 billion) from Switzerland’s central bank to shore up market confidence.

1. What went wrong?

Credit Suisse’s failings have included a criminal conviction for allowing drug dealers to launder money in Bulgaria, entanglement in a Mozambique corruption case, a spying scandal involving a former employee and an executive and a massive leak of client data to the media. Its association with disgraced financier Lex Greensill and failed New York-based investment firm Archegos Capital Management compounded the sense of an institution that did not have a firm grip on its affairs. Many fed up clients have voted with their feet, leading to unprecedented client outflows in late 2022.

2. What triggered the latest share slump?

CEO Ulrich Koerner launched a massive outreach to woo back nervous clients and their cash. The effort appeared to be paying off by January, with the bank reporting “net positive” deposits. However, on March 9, the US Securities and Exchange Commission queried the bank’s annual report, forcing it to delay its publication. Panic spread after regional US lender Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) failed, the victim in part of risky investments and rising global interest rates that eroded the value of its bond holdings. Investors began ditching anything that smelled of banking risk and deposit flight.

3. How bad did the situation get?

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On March 15, Credit Suisse stock slumped anew when the chairman of its largest shareholder, Saudi National Bank, ruled out investing any more in the company. This prompted Credit Suisse to ask the Swiss central bank for a public statement of support. The cost of insuring the bank’s bonds against default for one year surged to levels not seen for major international banks since the Global Financial Crisis of 2008. As other banks sought to hedge their counterparty risk for transactions with Credit Suisse, quoted prices for a one-year credit default swap jumped from 836 basis points — indicating a probability of defaulting of 10% — on March 14 to higher than 3,000 basis points. Few actual trades were executed, however, as liquidity in the market dried up. In another sign of stress, Credit Suisse’s additional Tier 1 bonds — which are subordinate to all other ranks of debt and may be written down if capital falls below a predetermined level — were trading below 80% of face value, a level typically signalling distress. Even bonds coming due in April traded at prices well below face value.

4. What’s next for Credit Suisse?

Credit Suisse has discussed ways to stabilise the bank with the Swiss authorities, Bloomberg News reported, with the first salvo being a late statement on March 15 by Switzerland’s central bank and financial regulator saying the bank will receive a liquidity backstop if needed. The regulator also confirmed Credit Suisse meets the capital and liquidity requirements it imposes on systemically important banks. On March 16, Credit Suisse announced it has arranged to borrow as much as CHF50 billion from the Swiss National Bank and is making a tender offer to buy back up to CHF3 billion of dollar- and euro-denominated debt. Other options being discussed include a separation of the lender’s Swiss unit and a long-shot orchestrated tie-up with larger Swiss rival UBS Group, although it is unclear whether these steps will actually be executed, people familiar with the matter said. The Swiss government has also floated the idea of acquiring a stake in Credit Suisse as part of a capital increase if necessary.

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5. Has the crisis spread?

Credit Suisse’s woes have added fuel to a broader flight from risky asset classes, with the Bloomberg Commodity Index, which tracks prices for 24 raw materials, dropping to its lowest level in 14 months on March 15. It is also feeding into growing speculation on whether central banks will hit pause on tightening efforts amid the market turmoil. The immediate focus is on the European Central Bank’s policy meeting on March 16, and whether policymakers will deliver a flagged half-point increase in interest rates or opt for a smaller move and delay their efforts to tame surging inflation.

6. Is this another Lehman Brothers moment?

The Wall Street giant, whose failure in 2008 triggered the global financial crisis, succumbed when funding dried up and other banks stopped dealing with it. Unlike Lehman and SVB, Credit Suisse has substantial liquid assets to call upon and access to central bank lending facilities and is less sensitive than many rivals to sharp moves in interest rates. It has rebuilt its cushion against more deposit withdrawals since the worst wave of outflows in October. It also has enough money-like liquid assets to pay back half of all its liabilities in deposits and loans from other banks, according to Bloomberg Opinion banking columnist Paul J Davies. Koerner said the firm’s liquidity coverage ratio showed it can handle over a month of heavy outflows in a period of stress.

7. What else is Koerner doing to turn things around?

His three-year recovery plan involves 9,000 job cuts, dismantling the investment banking behemoth assembled over five decades and returning Credit Suisse to its origins as banker to the world’s ultra-wealthy. That means spinning off First Boston, an American investment bank it acquired in 1990 with a view to listing it in 2025, and selling parts of its securitised products unit to Apollo Global Management. That process is now at risk of becoming bogged down in a broader financial-sector selloff following the collapse of SVB and two other US banks. — Bloomberg Quicktake

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