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UBS Completes Credit Suisse Takeover To Create Swiss Bank Titan (bloomberg.com) 43

UBS Group completed the deal to acquire former rival Credit Suisse Group, sealing the biggest merger in banking since the 2008 financial crisis and creating a global wealth-management titan. From a report: The Swiss bank announced the closing of the deal in an open letter in local and international newspapers on Monday. The takeover of Credit Suisse ends the lender's 167-year independent existence. The announcement caps more than two months of uncertainty for employees after UBS finalized negotiations with the Swiss government over a 9 billion Swiss franc ($10 billion) guarantee against potential losses on Credit Suisse assets. The deal sets UBS up for a windfall gain in the tens of billions of dollars and begins a period of complex integration likely to involve thousands of job cuts.
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UBS Completes Credit Suisse Takeover To Create Swiss Bank Titan

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  • WAY too big to fail (Score:5, Informative)

    by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Monday June 12, 2023 @02:27AM (#63594482) Homepage
    Swiss here. We are hoping that UBS will be forced to divest almost immediately. This new entity is beyond "too big to fail" and into "we could dictate government policy" territory.
    • Are the Swiss focused on domestic divestiture or global? Globally it isn't *that* big, but I imagine it has a big domestic impact.

      • by Kokuyo ( 549451 )

        That's the point, we'd really like the domestic banking being split from the international and especially investment ones.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Well, if you take the list from 2022 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org], then the UBS + CS combo is somewhere around number 10 of the largest banks on the planet. Does not seem like "not that big" to me. Of course CS is not worth much these days, but it is unclear how that will develop. UBS alone was place 34 in 2022, and around 1/3 in assets of the largest US bank. Again hardly a case of "not that big".

        • by LordFolken ( 731855 ) on Monday June 12, 2023 @09:15AM (#63595128)

          According to them they manage now 3.4 Billion USD. That puts them pretty much near the top of that list.

          You also have to realize, that we have only a population of 8.5 Million people. This bank we couldn't save, should it fail, tearing down the entire economy with it.

          Plus trust is nearly 0 in UBS after the 2008 fiasco.

          • by gweihir ( 88907 )

            That much? That is even more than my slap-dash estimate. So, yes pretty much. Incidentally, I am one of those 8.5 million. I do think the Swiss economy would survive, but this would have pretty bad international effects and may trigger a much larger crisis. On the plus side, Ermotti is not incompetent, unlike the CS leadership (and board) has been for the last 10 years or so. So there is hope.

          • You mean the German Billion, which confusingly translates to TRillion (1000 billions) in English.
    • Also, considering Credit Suisse's reputation, the world really doesn't need an even bigger fraudster corporation.

      • Considering that CS has a much worst rep then UBS (and presumably same for managment), I hope they don't do a Boeing and end up with CS managment in charge of the combined UBS later.........

    • by Anonymous Coward
      UBS is relatively modestly sized even with this. Even all 4 of the main Australian banks are around the same or bigger.
    • The same here, I don't see any reason to celebrate bankruptcy of large bank and its merging into near monopoly structure
    • by CEC-P ( 10248912 )
      Well, "hoping" and "actually doing something to stop the purposeful centralization of banks worldwide to switch to a digital currency and over-regulate everyone and control speech and actions permanently" are two different things. Get out there and make some noise about it and start using alternatives.
    • So what happened to "Adam Smith's" (famous 60s/70s pseudonymous author) assertion in I believe, Supermoney, of being told that in Switzerland "crimes against a bank" are considered more serious than murder?
    • and into "we could dictate government policy" territory.

      As an American, I share your reservations. UBS is significantly bigger than the biggest US bank, and did not have a reputation for being better at risk management than CS. Are the Gnomes of Switzerland and the Gnomes of the Federal Reserve going to force US taxpayers to bail it out if it gets into trouble?

  • I hope it plays well with the other Titans [wikipedia.org].

  • Can't see the big banks surviving too much longer, they're getting to the point where everyone is going to lose their money again.
  • When I first read the headline, I thought it was talking about the connector.

  • by pez ( 54 )

    Will there be a flood of reddit users here today and tomorrow, I wonder?

  • But Swiss regulators force this shotgun wedding on them.

  • We're running out of large banks to buy out the slightly smaller banking titans when they fail. We all know what happens once the largest of the titans fall and I haven't heard a single person in government offer a suggestion on how to handle that situation when it eventually happens.
    • We're running out of large banks to buy out the slightly smaller banking titans when they fail. We all know what happens once the largest of the titans fall and I haven't heard a single person in government offer a suggestion on how to handle that situation when it eventually happens.

      You haven't heard of countries nationalizing banks before?

Somebody ought to cross ball point pens with coat hangers so that the pens will multiply instead of disappear.

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