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Federal Administrative Court Rules Against Finma in Credit Suisse AT1 Bond Case

by Priya Shah – Business Editor

Zurich,Switzerland ⁣- A ruling by the federal Administrative Court has dealt a‌ significant blow to Swiss financial regulator Finma,siding with⁤ investors challenging ​the controversial write-off ⁢of $18.1 billion (16.5⁤ billion‌ francs)​ in Credit Suisse’s Additional Tier 1 (AT1) bonds during the UBS takeover. The court found⁣ Finma’s decision to wipe ‍out the bonds was not justified.

The case centers ​on⁤ whether the AT1 write-down genuinely ⁤strengthened credit Suisse’s capital position, a prerequisite ​for such a move.⁣ Investors argued the write-off served primarily to benefit UBS, not to bolster⁣ Credit ⁤Suisse’s solvency,‌ particularly as finma and the ​Swiss National Bank had declared on March‌ 15, 2023, that ⁢Credit Suisse *had* sufficient capital.This⁤ ruling throws into⁣ question Finma’s authority and could open the door to further legal⁣ challenges and potential compensation claims from bondholders.

AT1 ⁣bonds, introduced after​ the 2008 financial crisis, are designed to absorb losses and ⁤prevent taxpayer-funded bank bailouts. Investors accept a higher interest rate in exchange for the risk⁢ that their bonds​ may be written down if a bank’s capital falls below a certain threshold.​ The plaintiffs maintained that the conditions for triggering a write-down were ‌not met when UBS acquired Credit Suisse on March 23, 2023.

Investors contend the write-off of the 16.5 billion francs ‌in AT1 bonds did not improve‌ Credit Suisse’s capital base, but instead transferred value to UBS. The Federal Administrative Court’s decision represents a major setback for Finma, which ​had originally ordered the ‌write-off. The ruling’s implications will be further examined as‌ the case potentially ‌moves to the next instance, the Federal administrative Court.

Liz Horowitz Rüttimann, Business editor

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