Search Site

Trends banner

Tesla’s first Saudi showroom opens

The opening in Riyadh comes with Tesla sales dropping.

Mubadala Energy enters US energy market

Acquires a 24.1% interest in US firm Kimmeridge’s SoTex

Borouge to increase dividend from 2025

The company okayed $650 million final dividend for 2024.

TikTok’s US future uncertain

It must find non-Chinese owner to avoid ban.

Tesla Q1 sales sink 13 percent

The dip occurred amid lower production during factory upgrades.

Swiss reserve hike hits UBS

UBS was strongarmed by the Swiss government to buy Credit Suisse last year. (AFP)
  • The move follows government plans unveiled earlier this month that would tighten rules for banks deemed too big to fail.
  • UBS, Switzerland's biggest bank, acquired struggling rival Credit Suisse last year in a government-engineered deal aimed at preventing a financial crisis.

Zurich, Switzerland — The Swiss central bank said Monday that it would raise the amount of funds that domestic lenders must store in its vaults, a move that weighed on UBS shares.

The Swiss National Bank (SNB) said the minimum reserve requirement will increase from 2.5 percent to four percent from July 1.

“Since sight deposits which are held by banks to meet minimum reserve requirements are not remunerated, the interest costs for the SNB will be reduced,” it added in a statement.

Around 1130 GMT, UBS shares were down around 10.4 percent following the announcement.

The move follows government plans unveiled earlier this month that would tighten rules for banks deemed too big to fail.

UBS, Switzerland’s biggest bank, acquired struggling rival Credit Suisse last year in a government-engineered deal aimed at preventing a financial crisis.

The acquisition created a banking behemoth with a balance sheet twice the size of Switzerland’s annual economic output, causing significant jitters.

The government’s proposed changes could force UBS to set aside an additional 15 to 25 billion Swiss francs ($16.4 billion to $27.4 billion), according to sector experts quoted in media reports.