Credit Suisse’s UBS Deal Seems Like an Extraordinary Bailout

 | Mar 21, 2023 07:28

Swiss central bank went to great lengths to cut short a major contagion in the making.

Despite a string of multiple bad calls and scandals over the last five years, Credit Suisse (NYSE:CS) was among the top 30 banks to be considered ‘Global Systemically Important Bank'. In the previous eight days, the bank’s stock had lost 75% of its value and was eventually subject to a takeover bid by rival UBS (SIX:UBSG) in a deal supported by the Swiss government.

In this light, what does the Credit Suisse ‘bailout’ tell us about the current state of banking?

h2 Credit Suisse to Become UBS/h2

On Sunday, Credit Suisse issued a press FSB ) that emerged from the ashes of the Great Financial Crisis of 2008, UBS is also designated as a global systemically important bank (G-SIB).

Both Credit Suisse and UBS are headquartered in Switzerland as multinational investment banks. The merger between Credit Suisse with UBS will leave UBS as the surviving entity once the deal is finalized by the end of 2023 under these conditions:

  • Credit Suisse shareholders are to receive 1 UBS share for 22.48 Credit Suisse shares.
  • Switzerland’s central bank, the Swiss National Bank, will provide extra liquidity access to Credit Suisse during the restructuring.
  • Personnel from Credit Suisse will continue employment as UBS appoints new leadership and integrates the bank’s operations under UBS.

The merger took motion once UBS upped its offer to buy Credit Suisse for $3.25 billion, following the $1 billion offer rejection by the Credit Suisse board. On Friday, Credit Suisse’s closing price was CHF1.86 (CHF1 = $1.0732). Therefore, even with UBS upping its offer from 0.25 to 0.50 per share in its stock, the CS buyout was heavily discounted.

Accordingly, CS shareholders will take a significant loss as they receive CHF0.76 in UBS shares for CS stock worth CHF1.86 just a few days ago. Axel P. Lehmann, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Credit Suisse, framed the UBS-Credit Suisse merger as the best outcome:

“Given recent extraordinary and unprecedented circumstances, the announced merger represents the best available outcome.”

Indeed, Credit Suisse’s merger with UBS was underpinned by multiple unprecedented events. The ending of the 167-year-old bank was hastily arranged over the weekend, which does not bode well for consumer confidence.

h2 Extraordinary Bailout of Credit Suisse/h2

Also on Sunday, the Swiss National Bank issued a press release on its CHF100 billion ($108 billion) to facilitate UBS’ takeover of Credit Suisse. The central bank clarified that “both banks have unrestricted access to the SNB’s existing facilities.”

Get The App
Join the millions of people who stay on top of global financial markets with Investing.com.
Download Now

A federal default guarantee backs the CHF100 billion liquidity assistance loan. If the borrower fails to repay its obligations, the SNB commits to selling government bonds and other debt securities.

This is the first such intervention since the Great Financial Crisis of 2008.

Typically, such federal default guarantees are implicitly assumed to boost consumer confidence in the banking system. The problem is that the SNB reported an annual 2022 loss of CHF 132.5 billion ($143B). This is the deepest loss in the central bank’s 116-year history, almost all coming from foreign currency positions, at CHF131.5 billion.