Credit Suisse had already been drawing on the Swiss National Bank’s (SNB) emergency liquidity assistance scheme.
Credit Suisse said last Wednesday it would take 50 billion francs from the scheme, which provides funding secured against collateral such as mortgages and securities. As long as the bank has more collateral, it can draw down further such funding. Central bank data on Monday indicated that Credit Suisse was likely already accessing the fund. On top of this, the Swiss National Bank offered the combined bank an emergency liquidity loan of up to 100 billion Swiss francs. That loan is protected in the event of a default.
The third tranche of support allows Credit Suisse to draw on a further 100 billion francs of funding via a public liquidity backstop, which is explicitly guaranteed by the Swiss government.
The SNB declined to comment about whether Credit Suisse or UBS had made use of the money on offer. Credit Suisse has been the biggest name ensnared in global market turmoil unleashed by the recent collapse of U.S. lenders Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
UBS and Credit Suisse were both in a group of the 30
global systemically important banks watched closely by
regulators. A failure by Credit Suisse failure would ripple
throughout the entire financial system, the Swiss government
said late on Sunday.
"The bankruptcy of Credit Suisse would have had a huge
collateral damage - on the Swiss financial market also, risk of
contagion for UBS and other banks, and also internationally,"
Swiss Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter told a press
conference.
($1 = 0.9278 Swiss francs)
(Reporting by John Revill; Additional reporting by Sinead
Cruise in London; editing by John O'Donnell and Susan Fenton)