Switzerland preparing emergency measures for UBS’ takeover of Credit Suisse: Report

CoinTelegraph reported:

The Swiss National Bank (SNB) and Switzerland’s financial regulator reportedly believe that the acquisition of investment bank Credit Suisse by UBS, Switzerland’s largest bank, is the “only option” to prevent a “collapse in confidence” in Credit Suisse.

According to a March 18 Financial Times report citing three people familiar with the situation, Switzerland is preparing to use “emergency measures” to accelerate the takeover by UBS of Credit Suisse, in an effort to finalize the acquisition before “markets open on Monday.”

It was noted that the emergency measures set in place would allow the deal to proceed without a shareholder vote, bypassing the usual Swiss regulations that require a “six-week” consultation period for shareholders “to consult on the acquisition.”

The SNB and the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) are reportedly working to “reach regulatory agreement” by Saturday night, having reportedly told international counterparts that “they regard a deal” with UBS as the “only option” to prevent a “collapse in confidence” in Credit Suisse.

Related: Let First Republic and Credit Suisse burn

It was noted that UBS intends to proceed with Credit Suisse’s plans to downsize its investment bank, with two of the people “briefed on the situation,” stating that the “combined entity will make up no more than a third of the merged group.”

UBS reportedly has “$1.1tn (trillion)” total assets on its balance sheet, while Credit Suisse has “$575bn (billion)” – a successful merge between the two Swiss banks would reportedly create one of “the biggest global systemically important financial institutions in Europe.”

This comes after American investment company BlackRock stated in a March 18 tweet that it “has no interest” in acquiring Credit Suisse.

Previously, the SNB and FINMA released a joint statement on March 15 stating that Credit Suisse met the “capital and liquidity requirements” imposed on systemically important banks.

The statement noted, if necessary, the SNB would provide Credit Suisse “with liquidity,” acknowledging that Credit Suisse had been “affected by market reactions in recent days.”

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