Swiss National Bank revealed as one of world's largest tech investors, with significant stakes in major US technology companies worth nearly fifth of national GDP.

"Switzerland doesn’t need a sovereign wealth fund when we have the SNB."
"But they don’t want to take any role in these companies – it is purely a tool to manage the currency."
The Swiss National Bank (SNB) has quietly evolved into a global financial titan, amassing a staggering US equity portfolio valued at $167 billion. This is not merely a conservative central bank managing reserves; it is a market-moving force with a stock portfolio now equivalent to nearly one-fifth of Switzerland's entire annual economic output. While the world watches sovereign wealth funds in Qatar and Singapore, the SNB has entered the same league, holding over 2,300 positions in the American market alone.
This unprecedented accumulation of assets marks a radical departure from traditional central banking. Unlike its peers, the SNB is not owned by the national government, yet it wields financial firepower that rivals the world's largest state investment vehicles. With an $855 billion balance sheet, the bank has effectively transformed into a massive investment engine, operating with a scale and aggression that belies its understated Swiss reputation. The revelation of these holdings confirms the SNB's status as a true "whale" in global finance, capable of influencing markets simply by the weight of its portfolio.
The SNB is betting the house on Big Tech. A colossal $42 billion of its portfolio is concentrated in just five companies: Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, and Nvidia. This is not a diversified safety net; it is a high-conviction wager on Silicon Valley's dominance. The numbers are eye-watering: the bank's stake in Apple alone hovers near $10 billion, while its investment in AI-chip giant Nvidia has surged to over $11 billion.
While other institutions tread carefully amid warnings of a tech bubble, the SNB has become a major shareholder in the companies defining the 21st century. This strategy places the Swiss franc's stability directly in the hands of American tech volatility. The bank's exposure is significantly higher than that of the Bank of Japan, which relies on ETFs, marking the SNB as a unique anomaly. It is a conservative institution behaving like an aggressive growth fund, holding direct stakes in the most volatile and valuable sector on the planet.
This massive accumulation of foreign stocks is not born of greed, but of necessity. The Swiss franc is currently grappling with its own success, having appreciated more than 13% against the US dollar this year alone. As global investors flee to the Swiss "safe haven" amid geopolitical turmoil and US President Donald Trump's tariff shocks, the franc's relentless strength threatens to crush Switzerland's export economy and trigger a deflationary spiral.
To combat this, the SNB is forced to intervene aggressively. Unlike the Federal Reserve or the ECB, which buy their own government bonds to influence rates, the SNB must look outward. It sells francs and buys foreign currencies—primarily dollars and euros—in a strategy analysts call "foreign quantitative easing." This flood of foreign cash must go somewhere, and for the last decade, the SNB has channeled it into the world's best-performing asset class: US equities. Roughly 87% of the bank's balance sheet is now held in foreign currency assets, a desperate firewall built to protect the domestic economy from the crushing weight of its own currency.
The line between central bank and sovereign wealth fund has blurred. "Switzerland doesn’t need a sovereign wealth fund when we have the SNB," asserts Arturo Bris of IMD Business School. Yet, this dual identity carries immense risk. While the SNB claims these investments are purely tools for currency management, the sheer size of its holdings—$167 billion in equities alone—exposes the Swiss national balance sheet to the whims of Wall Street.
The European Central Bank has already sounded alarms regarding a potential bubble in the tech sector. If the AI hype cycle bursts, the SNB's balance sheet could suffer a catastrophic contraction. Conversely, calls are mounting for the bank to manage this massive pot of money more actively to drive returns for the Swiss cantons. The SNB stands at a critical juncture: it is holding a tiger by the tail, forced to maintain massive exposure to foreign risk to save its local economy, all while navigating a market that many experts fear is overheated.