
Consultation on amendments to the
Banking Act and the Capital Adequacy
Ordinance
Page 15 of 33
3.2.
Assessment of the Federal Council's
proposal and the rejected alternatives
3.2.1.
Assessment of the full deduction of foreign subsidiaries
from Common Equity Tier 1
(CET1)
The Federal Council proposes full deduction of
investments in foreign subsidiaries from Common Equity
Tier 1 (CET1)
capital in order to
strengthen the parent bank in
Switzerland and protect
it completely from
possible write-downs of its international
subsidiaries.
UBS rejects this proposal for the following reasons:
●
,
as
it
would
indiscriminately
disadvantage
international
activities. The goal
of ensuring that
any losses in
the book values
of foreign subsidiaries
do not affect
the parent
bank's CET1
capital in
any scenario,
no matter
how unlikely, is extreme
because it
assumes
not
only
zero
risk
tolerance
but
also
a
completely
unrealistic
scenario.
The
insulation
of
foreign
subsidiaries also
contradicts the
business model
of an internationally
active company, where business
and
geographical diversification
reduces
the risk
of a
simultaneous and
complete loss
of value
of
foreign operations.
●
Based on the UBS financial
figures for the first quarter of
2025, which were also used
by the Federal
Council, the proposal would lead to additional capital
requirements of approximately USD 23 billion
(approximately 1/3 additional
Common Equity Tier
1 capital,
CET1). We estimate the
net annual cost
of
this
additional
capital
at
approximately
USD
1.7
billion,
which
is
why
the
proposal
is
also
disproportionate
. A sufficient cost/ benefit analysis has not been carried
out.
●
A full CET1 deduction would also
not be internationally aligned
and would therefore be a Swiss
solo effort.
There are
no relevant
competing financial
centers that
apply a
full CET1
deduction to
foreign subsidiaries.
In the
EU and the
UK – contrary
to the
explanations in
the Federal
Council report
– CET1
investments in subsidiaries
are underpinned with
a risk
weighting of 250%
up to 10%
of
the
parent
bank's
Common
Equity
Tier 1
(CET1)
capital and
do
not
have
to
be
deducted
in
full.
Furthermore, no
global standard
and no
major jurisdiction
require a
full deduction
of AT1 investments
in foreign subsidiaries from
the parent bank's CET1.
In addition, both the authorities in
the EU and
the UK grant
their banks extensive exemptions
(e.g., the EU
does not generally require
compliance
with
this
requirement)
or
relief
(e.g.,
the
UK
has
significantly
lower
capital
requirements
on
an
unweighted basis, i.e., leverage ratio).
3.2.2.
Assessment of the alternatives rejected
in the explanatory report
The explanatory report rejects
all of the alternatives
listed as insufficiently effective
because they do not
completely insulate the parent bank's Common Equity
Tier 1 (CET1) capital.
The assessment did not take
into account the costs associated with
the
extreme requirement
, the impact on the bank's competitive
position and profitability, or the instruments of recovery and resolution planning (RRP).
The Federal Council's proposal
attempts to address
the lessons learned by
moving
from one extreme,
with very far-reaching regulatory concessions in the case of Credit
Suisse,
to another extreme
,
proposing to eliminate all
risks regardless of cost.
The current capital regime
for foreign subsidiaries has
a balanced cost/benefit ratio. In principle,
therefore, no adjustments to the system are necessary.