UBS says government capital proposals would weaken bank, Swiss economy

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A sign in German that reads “part of the UBS group” in Basel on May 5, 2025.

Fabrice Coffrini | AFP | Getty Images

UBS Tuesday said government proposals for Switzerland’s biggest bank to hold more capital would weaken the bank, the Swiss financial sector and the country’s economy.

The bank said it supported the Swiss government’s aims of learning lessons from the Credit Suisse crisis and strengthening the Swiss regulatory framework.

“However, the currently proposed capital measures do not meet these criteria,” UBS said in its strongly worded response to a government consultation on the measures.

As a result of the Credit Suisse takeover initiated by the authorities and the proposed adjustments, UBS would have to hold around $42 billion of additional capital, the bank said.

Instead, the measures would put “put UBS at a significant disadvantage in an international comparison, weaken the Swiss economy and the financial center, and take insufficient account of the lessons learned from the Credit Suisse crisis,” the bank said.

UBS said it objected to the “extreme capital measures”, which it said were neither “proportionate nor internationally aligned.”

The government will examine the comments from the bank, industry bodies and political parties before deciding on how to proceed.

Under a plan to make the bank less risky, the government in June said UBS should no longer be able to count software and deferred tax assets as part of its required core capital.


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