Credit Suisse sacks managers over Greensill scandal
The Credit Suisse bank has fired the managers overseeing a multi-billion-dollar fund strategy linked to the now-defunct Greensill Capital.
Switzerland's second largest bank was forced to freeze and
wind down a $10 billion (CHF9.2 billion) fund range amid huge financial losses.
The Zurich-based bank dismissed former head of asset
management in Switzerland, Michel Degen, as well as the head of fixed income
Luc Mathys, and portfolio manager Lukas Haas, according to a person familiar.
The decision came after initial findings from an
investigation into the collapse of the funds were shared with the bank's board
of directors, the person said, asking for anonymity because the information is
private.
Credit SuisseExternal link had placed the three employees on
leave in March and halted bonuses for senior managers, after freezing
redemptions from the funds because of uncertainty over valuations.
The Swiss lender still hasn't been able to liquidate all of
the assets, leaving fund investors waiting for more than $3 billion (CHF2.8
billion) of their money almost a year on.
“Based on preliminary findings of the investigation which
have been shared with regulators, Credit Suisse has taken action with regards
to various individuals,” Simone Meier, a spokeswoman for the bank, said in an
emailed statement on Wednesday.
“These actions include termination of employment and severe
monetary penalties via compensation adjustments. External investigations are
still ongoing.”
The bank declined to comment on the individuals as well as
the timing or contents of the publication of a report into the Greensill
matter.
The publication of those findings is complicated because the
bank is still attempting to recover investors' money and any in-depth report
could have legal ramifications for the bank, people familiar with the matter
said.
External probes are still underway, including an
investigation by the Swiss financial regulator, FINMA , and the public
prosecutor of canton Zurich.
Switzerland is an attractive place to work and the country
needs specialists. But work permits can be hard to come by.
On Monday, former asset management head Eric Varvel
announced he was leaving the bank after three decades.
He had already given up much of his remit in March when the
bank was forced to freeze and wind down the Greensill-linked funds.
The payout and vesting of variable compensation for a number
of senior employees involved in Greensill -- including on the executive board
-- was put on hold in March so the bank could look into reclaiming some of
that. Varvel could face a clawback of up to $10 million, the Financial Times
newspaper reported this month, citing unidentified people familiar with the
matter.
Credit Suisse has already reclaimed about $70 million in
pay, including bonus clawbacks, and punished 23 people for their role in the
Archegos Capital Management scandal, which cost the bank $5.5 billion.
In August, it published an in-depth report prepared into the
Archegos matter that resulted in the ousting of nine executives.
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