Bloomberg News
Credit SuisseBoard Backs CEO in Feud With Swiss Central Bank
By Christine Harper and Liam Vaughan on June 22, 2012
Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN)âs board threw its support behind Chief Executive Officer Brady Dougan a week after the Swiss National Bank said the company needs to accelerate efforts to raise capital.
âThe board is comfortable with the progress that has been made toward meeting the Basel 3 capital requirements,â the directors said in a statement today, adding that theyâre âconfidentâ that managementâs plans will ensure the Zurich- based bank exceeds capital requirements.
Credit Suisse, the second-biggest Swiss bank by assets, fell as much as 11 percent on June 14, hitting the lowest level since 1992, when the Swiss central bank surprised the company by urging it to boost capital âduring the current year.â Dougan, a 52-year-old U.S. citizen whoâs been CEO since May 2007, has contended he doesnât plan to sell stock to raise capital.
âTheyâre going into battle with the Swiss National Bank because they feel unfairly treated,â said Christopher Wheeler, a London-based analyst at Mediobanca SpA. âThey have a glide path to increasing capital based on retaining earnings but the SNB is quite aggressive in wanting them to move earlier.â
The boardâs statement, issued after a regularly scheduled meeting, may help quell speculation that Douganâs job was at risk. Swiss newspapers including Tages-Anzeiger and Der Sonntag, citing unidentified sources, reported last month that the board may be interested in finding a new CEO.
âPressure is building and if they do have to go to the market to raise equity capital it could have a big impact on the CEOâs position,â Wheeler said.
âVery Confidentâ
The board includes representatives from the bankâs two biggest shareholders, Olayan Group of Saudi Arabia and sovereign-wealth fund Qatar Holding LLC, which participated in Credit Suisseâs 10 billion-franc ($10.5 billion) capital increase in October 2008. Koor Industries Ltd. (KOR), a Tel Aviv-based company that also helped the lender raise capital, said in an e- mail this week that itâs âvery confident in the bankâs management and performance.â
The Swiss government, the SNB and the market regulator are stepping up efforts to make the countryâs biggest banks prepared in the event that the European debt crisis worsens. The Swiss National Bank on June 14 singled out Credit Suisse as needing a bigger capital boost than UBS AG, and put a time-frame on its recommendation.
New Stock
The lender has no plans to sell shares, Dougan told SonntagsZeitung in an interview published on June 17. Some employees, disagreeing with Dougan, favor selling new stock even at current levels to put an end to questions about the firmâs capital strength, four senior managers said in interviews this week.
Credit Suisseâs common equity and contingent convertible bonds, known as CoCos, amounted to about 5.9 percent of risk- weighted assets under Basel 3 at the end of March, the central bank said. That ratio stood at 7.5 percent for UBS, it said. Had the SNB included CoCos to be issued next year in its calculations, Credit Suisseâs capital ratio would have been 7.9 percent, Dougan told SonntagsZeitung. CoCos convert into shares when the bankâs capital ratio falls below a predefined level.
To contact the reporters on this story: Christine Harper in New York at
charper@bloomberg.net Liam Vaughan in London at
lvaughan6@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rick Green at
rgreen18@bloomberg.net. Edward Evans at
eevans3@bloomberg.net.