FINMA welcomes PInC report on the CS crisis
The Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority acknowledges the
report published today by the Parliamentary Investigation Committee
into the CS crisis. In particular, it welcomes the recommendation made
to the Federal Council for FINMA to have additional powers. It
understands the criticism levelled at the way in which the “regulatory
filter” was implemented in 2017.
FINMA acknowledges the PInC
report published today and particularly welcomes the recommendation it
makes to the Federal Council regarding new powers for the supervisory
authority. This is in line with the thrust of the Federal Council’s
report on banking stability published in April of this year and
reflects the demands that FINMA has repeatedly expressed publicly
since April 2023.
In this context, FINMA emphasises that more
active public communication about supervisory activities, the
introduction of a responsibility regime, the power to impose fines and
the ability to intervene at an earlier stage are instruments that will
further strengthen supervision and that FINMA has so far lacked
compared with its international peers.
As an organisation,
FINMA is also actively learning lessons from the Credit Suisse case
and improving where necessary. As it has already stated in its own
report on the lessons learned from the CS crisis, FINMA will continue
to expand its supervisory practices in areas such as risk culture,
governance, business models and recovery plans.
FINMA
acknowledges that its enforcement activities have been judged by the
PInC to be lawful and for the most part appropriate. The PInC also
notes that in the CS case, the instrument of enforcement proceedings
in its current form – particularly where there is a lack of
willingness on the part of the responsible bodies – reached its
limits. FINMA therefore welcomes the recommendation made by the PInC
to the Federal Council for the necessary conditions to be created to
strengthen the enforceability of enforcement proceedings.
FINMA understands the criticism of the implementation of the
regulatory filter in 2017 expressed in the report. The filter was
deemed necessary by FINMA in the political context at the time in
order to ensure the abolition of Article 125 of the CAO. Although the
PInC states that the filter was lawful and was disclosed, FINMA
acknowledges the PInC’s criticism that the filter was unlimited in
terms of time and amount.
The PInC report emphasises that
years of mismanagement by CS’s Board of Directors and Executive Board
were at the root of the crisis.
FINMA also takes note of the
recommendation regarding the FAOA. The supervisory authority is
generally open to the discussion concerning an integration of the FAOA
into FINMA.
With regard to the recommendations concerning the
supervisory authority, FINMA is available to the Federal Council for
further discussions. Contact
Patrizia Bickel, Spokesperson
Phone +41 (0)31 327 93 19 patrizia. bickel@finma. ch