Gold and Silver • Swiss banking chief tries to quell clamor about gold
Swiss banking chief tries to quell clamor about gold
http://www.gata.org/node/12511
Submitted by cpowell on Fri, 2013-04-26 15:19. Section: Daily Dispatches
Jordan Won’t Rule Out Future SNB Gold Purchases
By Catherine Bosley
Bloomberg News
Friday, April 26, 2013
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-04-2 … uture-sn...
ZURICH — Swiss National Bank President Thomas Jordan won’t exclude increasing the central bank’s gold holdings at some point and said most of its reserves are held domestically.
"As part of a good diversification of currency reserves, a certain proportion of gold can help reduce the balance sheet risk," Jordan said in Bern today, according to a copy of his speech:
http://www.snb.ch/en/mmr/speeches/id/re … _2013042...
"We have therefore never ruled out the possibility of future gold purchases," he said.
The SNB owns 1,040 tons of gold. More than 70 percent are held in Switzerland, with about 20 percent at the Bank of England and 10 percent at the Bank of Canada, he said, for the first time disclosing where the physical assets were stored.
Germany’s Bundesbank in January announced plans to repatriate 674 metric tons of gold from vaults in Paris and New York by 2020. As a result, 50 percent of the German central bank’s gold will be stored in its home city of Frankfurt by the end of the decade.
The SNB’s gold holdings are the target of a popular initiative, which demands that at least 20 percent of the central bank’s assets be in the form of gold. The measure would also block the sale of such holdings and require all SNB gold to be located in Switzerland.
In his speech at the central bank’s annual general meeting in the Swiss capital, Jordan said the initiative, were it to go through, would be counterproductive.
"These measures would, in certain situations, considerably hinder the SNB in fulfilling its monetary policy mandate and be detrimental to Switzerland," he said.
The SNB’s mandate is to maintain price stability, which it defines as positive inflation below 2 percent.
The Swiss People’s Party, the SVP, members of which started the initiative after failing to get backing for the issues in parliament, submitted 106,052 valid signatures for the referendum, the Federal Chancellery said on April 18. Still, the actual popular vote may be years away, according to the chancellery.
The SNB’s balance sheet has expanded significantly since it set a cap of 1.20 per euro on the franc in September 2011. The SNB held foreign-exchange reserves totaling a record 438.3 billion francs ($470 billion) at the end of last month, a sum equal to nearly three quarters of the country’s annual economic output.
Were the initiative to be accepted, the SNB would have to make "large-scale gold purchases" to meet the required 20 percent threshold, Jordan said. Later on it wouldn’t be able sell gold, even if it had to reduce its balance sheet again to maintain price stability, he said.
The restrictions on gold holdings could also reduce the interest income the SNB receives by holding stocks and bonds, he said, adding that in turn that could reduce the annual payout it makes to the government and the 26 cantons, which are its biggest shareholders.
The SNB’s "capacity to act in monetary policy matters must not be compromised by rigid rules on the composition of its balance sheet," he said.
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Sun Apr 28, 2013 8:55 pm
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International News • 20,000 Swiss civil servants protest austerity
20,000 Swiss civil servants protest austerity
AFP – Some 20,000 teachers, police, hospital workers and other civil servants gathered in the Swiss capital Saturday to protest austerity measures and demand better working conditions and salary increases, unions said.
"The canton of Bern doesn’t have enough money and it is the civil servants who are paying the price," Michael Gerber, a spokesman for the regional teacher’s union LEBE that helped organise the demonstration, told AFP.
Gathered in Bern’s main square, the Bundesplatz, the demonstrators urged the cantonal government to "Stop the demolition".
The canton has, according to the ATS news agency, balanced its budget by binning automatic public sector salary increases and slashing some 55 million Swiss francs ($59 million, 45 million euros) in spending, especially in the school and health sectors.
"Salaries have basically been frozen, (and) working conditions are far from what they should be," Gerber lamented.
He pointed out that the canton six years ago scrapped a law that previously ensured regular salary increases for teachers, instead allowing lawmakers to decide each year whether there is enough money in the pot to up their pay.
The demonstration, which reportedly marked the biggest protest by Bern civil servants in more than a decade, should also be seen as "a message against the bad financial policies," Beatrice Stucki, a Socialist parliamentarian and head of the SSP civil servant union, told ATS.
Charging that the canton government was handing out tax breaks to the wealthy while cutting spending on education, security and healthcare, she demanded "resources for all" to avoid the creation of a "two-tier society."
http://www.france24.com/en/20130316-200 … -austerity
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Sat Mar 16, 2013 1:17 pm
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Swiss Monetary Policy: Dangerous Contradictions
By Steve H. Hanke
The Swiss National Bank is conducting a bizarre, contradictory, and potentially dangerous set of monetary policies.
During the past year, the SNB has mandated the imposition of super-high bank capital requirements. Indeed, the SNB, in its annual Financial Stability Report, even admonished Credit Suisse for not building up a big enough capital cushion. The Swiss capital mandates have caused the rate of growth in money created by Swiss banks (bank money) to plunge.
As can be seen in the accompanying chart, Swiss bank money was 25 percent lower in July 2012 than it was in July 2011. This should be alarming because bank money is, by far, the biggest component of the total money supply. In fact, since the beginning of 2003, bank money has, on average, constituted 89 percent of the total Swiss money supply.
Bank regulations in Switzerland and elsewhere, have resulted in, you guessed it: very tight bank money.
Not being one to sit on its hands, the SNB has turned on its money pumps. Indeed, Swiss state money—the money produced by the SNB—was 305 percent higher in July 2012 than in July 2011.
This explosion in state money has been more than enough to offset the contraction of the all-important bank money component.
In consequence, Switzerland’s total money supply grew at a 10 percent year-over-year rate in July 2012. With double-digit money supply growth, and overall prices declining, it’s little wonder that prices in certain asset classes, such as housing, are surging in Switzerland.
Swiss Monetary Policy: Dangerous Contradictions is a post from Cato @ Liberty – Cato Institute Blog
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International News • The ‘slow death’ of the Swiss bank account
The ‘slow death’ of the Swiss bank account
Sovereign Man on AUGUST 6, 2012
As a growing number of countries stand on the brink of bankruptcy, desperation sets in to acquire as much tax revenue as possible. In doing so, many countries are going after renowned tax havens and are destroying all the privacy of offshore banking. Swiss bank accounts were some of the most prestigeous in the word but now that they don’t provide their former security, many account holders are quickly withdrawing their assets. Bloomberg reports on the resulting decline of Swiss banks:
Swiss banks must lure affluent clients from emerging markets or face a “slow death” as the pursuit of tax dodgers by U.S. and European authorities results in outflows of assets, industry officals and investors said.
Western Europeans may pull as much as 135 billion francs ($139 billion), or 15 percent of their holdings, from Swiss banks, said Herbert Hensle of Cap Gemini SA. Bank Sarasin & Cie. AG reported last week that private clients withdrew 3 billion francs from Swiss locations in the year through June.
Switzerland built the world’s biggest offshore wealth center during an era of “black money” that ended when the U.S. sued UBS AG (UBSN) three years ago. Many of the highest fee-generating European and American customers are withdrawing funds as the hunt for tax evaders widens. As many as 100 Swiss banks will vanish, according to Vontobel Holding AG Chief Executive Officer Zeno Staub.
“It will not be a big bang, but an erosion as amnesty programs are put together and as clients declare themselves and come clean,” said Francois Reyl, chief executive officer of Geneva-based Reyl Group, which manages 5.5 billion francs of assets. “Those banks which don’t adapt will die a slow death.”
Some banks are already under pressure. EFG International AG, the Swiss bank controlled by billionaire Spiro Latsis, last month reported outflows from continental Europe in the first half, while net new money from private clients at Vontobel fell 86 percent to 100 million francs from a year earlier.
http://www.sovereignman.com/news-feed/t … ount-8347/
Swiss Banks Face Slow Death As Taxman Chases Assets
By Giles Broom – Aug 5, 2012 4:01 PM MT
Gianluca Colla/Bloomberg
Swiss banks must lure affluent clients from emerging markets or face a “slow death” as the pursuit of tax dodgers by U.S. and European authorities results in outflows of assets, industry officals and investors said.
Reyl Group Chief Executive Officer Francois Reyl said, “Those banks which don’t adapt will die a slow death.” Photographer: Stephane Gros via Bloomberg
Julius Baer, Sarasin and other Swiss banks are investing onshore branch networks to retain European clients repatriating money. Compliance and regulatory costs, plus competition from local banks, mean the profit margins on those customers are lower. Photographer: Gianluca Colla/Bloomberg
Western Europeans may pull as much as 135 billion francs ($139 billion), or 15 percent of their holdings, from Swiss banks, said Herbert Hensle of Cap Gemini SA. Bank Sarasin & Cie. AG reported last week that private clients withdrew 3 billion francs from Swiss locations in the year through June.
Switzerland built the world’s biggest offshore wealth center during an era of “black money” that ended when the U.S. sued UBS AG (UBSN) three years ago. Many of the highest fee-generating European and American customers are withdrawing funds as the hunt for tax evaders widens. As many as 100 Swiss banks will vanish, according to Vontobel Holding AG Chief Executive Officer Zeno Staub.
“It will not be a big bang, but an erosion as amnesty programs are put together and as clients declare themselves and come clean,” said Francois Reyl, chief executive officer of Geneva-based Reyl Group, which manages 5.5 billion francs of assets. “Those banks which don’t adapt will die a slow death.”
Some banks are already under pressure. EFG International AG, the Swiss bank controlled by billionaire Spiro Latsis, last month reported outflows from continental Europe in the first half, while net new money from private clients at Vontobel fell 86 percent to 100 million francs from a year earlier.
Secret History
Switzerland passed bank secrecy laws in 1934 after bankers of Basler Handelsbank were arrested in Paris two years earlier for aiding tax evasion by wealthy French clients. Swiss banks amassed one-third of the world’s offshore wealth over the next 75 years, before the U.S. government sued UBS on Feb. 19, 2009, to force the disclosure of 52,000 American customers who allegedly hid undeclared assets in Swiss accounts.
Five days after the U.S. filed the UBS lawsuit, Ivan Pictet, then managing partner of Geneva’s biggest wealth manager Pictet & Cie., told Le Temps newspaper that Switzerland’s banking industry may shrink by half if the country abandons secrecy.
Three years on, Raymond Baer, honorary chairman of Julius Baer Group Ltd., said “banking secrecy, as we know it, is history.”
“Swiss institutions are preparing to tackle an outflow of assets and are developing white-money strategies,” said Zurich- based Hensle of Cap Gemini, with Europeans repatriating funds to their home countries. “The number of banks will decrease.”
Fewer Banks
Almost one in three banks will disappear or merge with other firms over the next five years as fees fail to compensate for rising regulatory costs and difficult market conditions, Vontobel’s Staub told Handelszeitung this month.
The number of overseas banks in Switzerland fell to 145 from 154 last year, according to the Association of Foreign Banks in Switzerland. There were 312 banks in Switzerland at the end of 2011, according to the Swiss Bankers Association.
Onshore deposits by individuals in Europe are failing to compensate for Swiss outflows in the last 12 months, Sarasin said July 30, when the Basel-based bank reported a 27 percent decline in first-half profit. Sarasin, which has six offices in Germany, is implementing a strategy to ensure all clients are tax-compliant by the end of 2012.
“Sometime in 2013 or 2014 we will have a drop in assets under management of something like 25 percent of the undeclared money,” Bernard Droux, a managing partner at Lombard Odier & Cie., Geneva’s oldest bank, said June 29, adding that it’s difficult to give precise estimates of undeclared money.
Asset Risk
As much of one-third of the $3 trillion of private wealth managed in Switzerland may be undeclared and at risk from foreign tax collectors, said Benedict Hentsch, chairman of Geneva-based Banque Benedict Hentsch & Cie. SA.
That figure is probably too high, according to Droux, who said that a maximum 15 percent of client money at Lombard Odier and other private banks is undeclared.
UBS said in November that as much as 30 billion francs of assets may be at risk amid changes in tax rules for European clients living outside Switzerland. Switzerland has ratified a withholding tax accord with the U.K. on Britons with bank accounts in the Alpine country, while Germany and Austria have also signed agreements.
Julius Baer, Sarasin and other Swiss banks are investing in onshore branch networks to retain European clients repatriating money. Compliance and regulatory costs, plus competition from local banks, mean the profit margins on those customers are lower.
Margin Squeeze
Margins on onshore assets in Germany may be less than half the 120 to 150 basis points earned on non-resident funds in Switzerland, according to Booz & Co., a consultancy. A basis point is one one-hundredth of a percentage point.
“Non-declared offshore assets were traditionally the most profitable assets,” said Andreas Lenzhofer, of Booz & Co. in Zurich. “There was very little client interaction, very little cost of compliance and the clients weren’t sensitive to prices. Now offshore clients are becoming the most expensive, challenging the profit model of the banks tremendously.”
UBS, Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN), Baer and Sarasin have in the past two weeks reported declines in their gross margin, or the revenue they generate on assets under management. The second- quarter margin at UBS’s wealth management unit for clients outside the U.S. fell to 89 basis points from 97 basis points a year earlier.
Smaller banks may struggle to adapt and some foreign-owned wealth managers are looking to leave, said Hensle. Julius Baer is in talks with Bank of America Corp. about buying its Merrill Lynch businesses outside the U.S.
U.S. Probe
An “avalanche of legislative and regulatory changes” from Europe and the U.S. and difficulties in accessing foreign markets could lead to the loss of 15 percent to 30 percent of Swiss wealth management jobs, said Nicolas Pictet, a managing partner at Pictet & Cie.
North American offshore assets in Switzerland have declined 70 percent to about 40 billion francs since 2009, according to Boston Consulting Group.
UBS avoided prosecution in February of that year by paying $780 million, admitting it fostered tax evasion and giving the IRS data on more than 250 accounts. It later turned over data on another 4,450 accounts.
Credit Suisse, Julius Baer and eight other banks being investigated by the Department of Justice may follow UBS in reaching a deferred prosecution agreement after Wegelin & Co. was indicted on Feb. 2 on charges of helping customers hide money from the Internal Revenue Service.
Liechtenstein Deal
One of the banks, Liechtensteinische Landesbank AG, said it’s already negotiating an agreement with the U.S. to prevent it being prosecuted. LLB’s American clients declared less than 4 percent of $795 million of assets, according to a DoJ information request dated May 11 to Liechtenstein’s tax authority.
“It takes time to sort out the U.S. offshore money,” said Peter Damisch of Boston Consulting in Zurich, adding that American clients will probably hold less than 10 billion francs in Swiss cross-border accounts by 2015.
Swiss banks’ hopes that they can counter outflows from traditional offshore markets by building networks across Asia, the Middle East and Latin America may be optimistic, said Beat Bernet, a professor of banking at the University of St. Gallen.
“It’s wishful thinking to assume the industry can compensate outflows by targeting emerging markets,” said Bernet. “Banks ought to face up to the situation that profitability will shrink and adapt their business models accordingly to cope with lower margins.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-08-0 … ssets.html
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Mon Aug 06, 2012 1:09 pm
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Police State • German taxman aims to buy more Swiss bank data – report
German taxman aims to buy more Swiss bank data – report
BERLIN | Sat Apr 7, 2012 7:39pm BST
BERLIN (Reuters) – A German tax inspector is in talks to buy banking data from Switzerland to help his office identify tax evaders, a magazine reported on Saturday – days after the two countries signed a landmark deal on taxing secret deposits.
The move seems likely to stoke bilateral tensions before Germany’s parliament votes on Thursday’s agreement, which is designed to stop wealthy German tax dodgers holding cash in secret Swiss bank accounts.
Weekly Der Spiegel said the head of the tax inspectors office in Wuppertal in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia was in negotiations to buy two new sets of data from Switzerland.
Learn the secrets of options trading from Bernie Schaeffer – free!Sign up Free hereSwiss authorities caused an outcry in Germany last weekend when they said they had issued arrest warrants for three German tax inspectors, accusing them of industrial espionage for buying bank details of German tax evaders.
Thursday’s agreement – under which Switzerland will tax Germans’ accounts and pass the proceeds to Germany – was in part a consequence of similar purchases in 2010 by several German states which put pressure on Switzerland to change its tradition of banking secrecy.
Some of the data in the latest case concerns internal information from Coutts private bank in Zurich, owned by Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS.L) and the seller wants about 2 million euros for data on about 1,000 customers, the magazine reported.
As in previous cases, the finance ministry would cover half the costs, it said.
A ministry spokesman said there had been repeated offers of information and each one was looked at carefully. He would not comment on individual cases.
Thursday’s agreement could net Germany billions of euros in tax revenues from individuals who have stashed savings in Swiss accounts to avoid tax.
The governments of both countries had hoped the deal would end a diplomatic spat that has dragged on for years.
But Germany’s opposition Social Democrats have threatened to scupper the legislation, saying they will vote against it in the upper house, where Chancellor Angela Merkel’s centre-right coalition is short of a majority.
The two governments had to revise the deal to make the terms tougher after the SPD rejected a previous version.
The SPD says the law will take effect too late, in 2013, and that it gives time to tax evaders to move their savings and remain anonymous.
Merkel’s government is betting that SPD-led states will ultimately drop their objections and support the deal as it will bring them a huge windfall.
North Rhine-Westphalia, which has an SPD-led minority government, holds regional elections next month in which an alliance of the centre-left party and the Greens is tipped to win a majority.
Germans hold an estimated 150 billion Swiss francs in Swiss bank accounts.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/04/0 … 7A20120407
Statistics: Posted by yoda — Sat Apr 07, 2012 6:36 pm
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