Russians Have up to $213 Billion Stashed Offshore in Swiss Banks
ZURICH - Switzerland's secretive banks hold up to $213
billion of Russian wealth, the country's financial industry association estimates,
as sanctions on Russia give a rare glimpse inside Swiss vaults.
The Swiss Bankers Association (SBA) estimated that the banks
hold between 150 billion and 200 billion Swiss francs ($213 billion) of Russian
client money in offshore accounts.
This indicates that the extent of wealthy Russians' business
with banks in Switzerland, the world's biggest centre for offshore wealth, is
far more extensive than the on-balance sheet exposures several of its financial
firms have begun to detail.
The SBA's revelation is rare for Switzerland, which has
stone-walled many previous transparency requests, and comes as it took the
unusual step of applying European Union sanctions to Russian cash following
Moscow's invasion of Ukraine last month.
There is growing Swiss public debate about its role, with
Mattea Meyer, co-president of the Social Democrats, calling for Switzerland to
clamp down on any cash belonging to Russians close to President Vladimir Putin
and his government.
"Part belongs to oligarchs loyal to the Kremlin. The
money and their activity ... helps finance the war," she said, adding that
Switzerland "must do everything possible to turn off the money taps".
The SBA estimate, which dwarfs initial indications of the
credit exposure to Russia, makes clear the scale of the task of imposing
sanctions, such as by freezing the cash.
The Swiss economy ministry said that it had no meaningful
estimates on frozen Russian assets as it tallies reports from banks facing a
growing Swiss sanctions list.
Despite its Russian tally estimate, the SBA stressed that
this was small compared to overall assets held in Switzerland, which has been
regarded by generations of wealthy individuals from around the world as a safe
haven for their money.
"The share of assets held for Russian clients likely
accounts for a share in the low single-digit percentage range of the total
cross-border assets deposited with Swiss banks," it said in an emailed
statement to Reuters on Wednesday, referring to money held for clients residing
abroad.
As Western governments unleash a growing list of sanctions
in response to Russia's invasion, banks are seeing their business with Russian
clients scrutinized far beyond the loans they have granted or business done out
of Russian subsidiaries that could lead to balance sheet losses.
Analysts have said direct Swiss bank exposures to Russian
clients look manageable, based on what has been made public.
Switzerland's two biggest banks last week detailed
"limited" exposures to Russia, with the largest UBS saying a $634
million direct exposure had been cut since year-end.
Credit Suisse Chief Executive Thomas Gottstein on Tuesday
said some 4% of the assets Switzerland's second-biggest bank manages for
wealthy clients belong to Russians, amounting to tens of billions of dollars.
That is far greater than the 848 million Swiss franc net
credit exposure in Credit Suisse's annual report.
While the bank has not provided an updated tally, it managed
827 billion francs in its wealth management businesses at end-2021, so 4% would
amount to some 33 billion Swiss francs in assets associated with Russian
customers.
UBS and Switzerland's third-largest listed lender, Julius
Baer, have declined to detail assets they hold for Russian customers, but UBS
CEO Ralph Hamers indicated sanctions were keeping the country's biggest bank
busy.
"New lists come out every night," he said, adding
that UBS was looking to shield not only against current compliance but also
against the risk of future penalties.
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