Swiss Leader: Must Restore Faith In Swiss Banking
Topics: From the Wires, News
GENEVA (AP) — One of Switzerland’s top priorities this year is to restore confidence in the country’s financial industry, the Swiss leader declared Thursday after a series of setbacks that included the resignation of the central bank chief.
President Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said the Cabinet was examining ways of tightening loopholes in its oversight of both the central bank and its directors’ personal business transactions.
Swiss National Bank chairman Philipp Hildebrand stepped down Monday amid a public furor over his family’s private currency deals, which he maintained were legal under the bank’s internal rules against insider trading. Hildebrand was considered a key actor in Switzerland’s efforts to resist being dragged into the European debt crisis.
Widmer-Schlumpf told reporters the government would await a report on the personal financial deals conducted by the remaining five members of the central bank’s governing board before deciding who should replace Hildebrand. She declined to say whether external candidates would also be considered.
Mario Draghi, the president of the European Central Bank, indicated that Switzerland might not have lost its much-admired central bank chief if the Swiss National Bank’s rules had been stricter.
“I have to say, we all regret the developments that led to Mr. Hildebrand’s resignation because I think we will miss a very, very good central bank governor,” he said at his monthly press conference in Frankfurt.
“I also have to say that the ethical code that we have in place at the ECB — which is, by the way, public — prevents any such happening,” said Draghi.
With Hildebrand’s resignation, Switzerland lost its coveted seat on the Financial Stability Board, an exclusive forum of central bankers and regulators. The 48-year-old Swiss was the FSB’s vice chairman, giving Switzerland a significant voice when shaping plans to regulate the global financial industry.
At home, Hildebrand pushed through some of the strictest capital requirements for banks anywhere in the world. The rules were criticized as burdensome by Swiss banks, but backed by a government wary of the consequences for Switzerland if one of its two biggest banks — UBS AG and Credit Suisse — were to collapse.
UBS required a $60 billion government bailout in 2008 after it saw massive losses caused by the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis. A year later, the bank became embroiled in a major tax evasion case in the United States that required government intervention. And in September, UBS announced a $2.3 billion loss caused by a trader in London.




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