UBS probably offers a billion dollars for Credit Suisse

Dhe crisis-ridden Credit Suisse (CS) could be in the arms of its Zurich local rival UBS land and thus lose their independence after 167 years. As has been confirmed in well-informed circles, negotiations for the takeover of CS by UBS are ongoing. If possible, they should be completed by Sunday evening, but they could also fail. According to a report in the Financial Times, UBS is offering a billion dollars for CS.
They’re in the negotiations Swiss National Bank (SNB) and the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (Finma) are involved, as is the Swiss government, which met for crisis meetings on Saturday evening and Sunday morning. After that there was no comment from the government; all other participants also remained silent at the weekend.
Customers probably withdrew a lot of money
On Thursday it still looked as if the SNB would calm the heated mood around the scandal- and loss-plagued with its liquidity injection of CHF 50 billion big bank would bring. But on Friday, the badly battered CS share price on the stock exchange collapsed again. And the risk premiums for CS bonds also remained at a record high, which shows that the market continues to have doubts about the bank’s future viability.
Apparently, unsettled customers continued to withdraw funds on a large scale. Regulators are the driving force behind the takeover. They fear that a “bank run” and a possible collapse of the bank that may sooner or later result CreditSuisse could not only severely damage the Swiss financial center, but could also fuel the already tense situation in the banking industry due to the collapse of the Silicon Valley Bank and thus shake the international financial system.
As a systemically important bank with total assets of CHF 531 billion and a strong presence in investment banking, the CS affiliated with financial institutions around the world. At the end of the past week, some of them apparently already issued the slogan internally to shut down business with the Swiss.
Lots of work for UBS
UBS had maintained until the very end that it had no interest in taking over its fallen rival. And with good reason: UBS’s business is doing well; she is solid. If Credit Suisse were to be integrated, it would take on immense work for years to come. Harmonizing the IT systems alone is a Herculean task, not to mention the different cultures of the companies that have always been very competitive.
A takeover also entails enormous financial risks. After all, after a number of homemade scandals that can be traced back to inadequate risk management, CS is involved in numerous legal disputes that are likely to result in costs running into billions.
Billions in aid from the state?
Against this background, the negotiations are not just about the price at which a takeover bid could be made to Credit Suisse shareholders. CS was worth CHF 7.4 billion on the stock exchange on Friday. Accordingly, in view of the now rumored takeover price of one billion dollars, the bank would go to UBS at a very high discount.