Legal
UBS Faces Hit From Archegos Saga – Report

In taking over Credit Suisse, UBS is shouldering a number of litigation issues that hung over the head of its rival and played a part in bringing Credit Suisse down.
UBS faces hundreds of
millions of dollars in regulatory fines over Credit Suisse’s
dealings with New York-based Archegos Capital,
the hedge fund/family office that collapsed amidst wrong-way
market bets, a media report said.
The US Federal Reserve’s fine over Archegos may be as high as
$300 million, while the UK’s Prudential Regulation Authority
could impose a penalty of up to ÂŁ100 million ($128 million),
Bloomberg quoted an unnamed source as saying. Switzerland’s
financial regulator doesn’t have the authority to impose fines,
the report said.
Zurich-listed UBS declined to comment when contacted by this news
service.
The
purchase for SFr3 billion ($3.3 billion) of Credit Suisse by UBS
was undertaken at the behest of the Swiss federal government,
fearful that a collapse of the country’s second-largest lender
would hammer the economy. The merger – formally completed over a
week ago – leaves the Alpine state with only one universal
bank.
UBS has already given guidance that legal liabilities related to
Credit Suisse could run to as much as $4 billion over 12 months,
and asset mark-downs could come in at some $13 billion.
Credit Suisse – a bank with a history dating back to the mid-19th
century – was brought down by a string of scandals and missteps
that included losses caused by its exposure to Archegos. In March
2021 Archegos defaulted on its loan relationships with Credit
Suisse after significant falls in the value of its positions.
A sub-theme to the Archegos story is that because the firm was
structured as a family office, removing the need for certain
levels of US regulatory oversight, it prompted calls for tighter
oversight of family offices.
Credit Suisse’s
trading losses linked to Archegos, which ran the fortune of
Bill Hwang, were far larger than those sustained by UBS. Besides
Credit Suisse, UBS, Nomura, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley had
working links with Archegos.
As part of the takeover deal between UBS and Credit Suisse,
holders of Credit Suisse’s Additional Tier 1 bonds – forms of
buffer capital created for European banks after the 2008 crash –
have had their bonds written down. This has sparked anger and
a number of lawsuits, including from institutions such as
PIMCO.