According to a new UBS foreign exchange survey, Swiss companies are pessimistic about the euro and expect the Swiss franc to remain strong, forecasting an exchange rate of CHF 0.91 to the euro by the end of 2026, even as the bank's own economists hold a different view.

"The companies surveyed expect an even slightly lower euro exchange rate of CHF0.91 at the end of 2026."
"If the recovery fails to materialise... the experts see the euro exchange rate at CHF0.90."
Pessimism reigns supreme in Swiss boardrooms as the relentless strength of the Franc continues to hammer exporters. In a stark revelation from the latest UBS foreign exchange survey, Swiss companies are bracing for a punishing exchange rate of CHF 0.91 to the Euro by the end of 2026. This isn't just caution; it is a resignation to a new economic reality where the Franc acts as an unyielding anvil on profit margins. The Euro recently plummeted to a record low of 0.9124, a figure that sends shivers through the manufacturing sector, yet barely elicited a surprise from hardened executives.
For the 300 companies surveyed, the writing is on the wall: the era of parity is dead. While the currency briefly stabilized after hitting its Monday night nadir, the sentiment on the ground is unequivocally bearish. Business leaders are no longer planning for a rebound; they are restructuring for survival in a high-cost environment. This 0.91 forecast signals that the captains of Swiss industry see no relief on the horizon, preparing instead for a year of grinding currency attrition that threatens to erode competitiveness across the continent.
It is not just the Euro that is bleeding out against the Swiss currency; the US Dollar is grappling with its own crisis of confidence. The Greenback crashed to a staggering multi-year low of CHF 0.7605 at the end of January, a level that complicates life for every Swiss firm with exposure to the American market. While the currency has clawed back slightly to trade around CHF 0.7666, the damage to sentiment is done.
Swiss companies are forecasting the Dollar to limp toward CHF 0.78 by the end of 2026, a prediction that underscores the broad-based demand for the Franc. This is not merely a regional European issue; it is a global flight to safety that is inflating the value of the Franc beyond sustainable levels for exporters. As the Dollar struggles to find a floor, Swiss multinationals are forced to hedge aggressively, confronting a dual-front currency war where both major trading partners—the US and the Eurozone—are seeing their purchasing power dissolve against the Franc.
A significant rift has opened between the ivory towers of banking and the factory floors of industry. While companies grit their teeth for a 0.91 exchange rate, UBS economists are projecting a far sunnier outlook, forecasting a rebound to CHF 0.95 by the end of 2026. This divergence highlights a critical disconnect: the bank sees macroeconomic potential where businesses see operational reality.
UBS justifies its optimism with the expectation that the German economic engine will finally roar back to life in 2026, providing a much-needed tailwind for the Euro. However, corporate Switzerland remains unconvinced. The gap between the 0.91 expectation from CEOs and the 0.95 prediction from economists represents millions of francs in potential revenue—or losses. If the bank is wrong, businesses relying on these more optimistic forecasts could find themselves dangerously exposed. For now, the companies putting their own capital on the line are betting against the economists, trusting their order books over macroeconomic models.
The entire UBS forecast hinges on a single, fragile variable: Germany. The bank's prediction of a stronger Euro assumes that Europe's largest economy will accelerate in 2026, pulling the common currency up with it. But this is a high-stakes gamble. If the German recovery stalls, or if geopolitical tensions escalate, the safety net vanishes.
UBS economists admit that if these risks materialize, the Franc will surge once again as the world's ultimate safe haven. In that scenario, they concede the rate could plummet to CHF 0.90—even lower than the pessimistic corporate forecast. This admission reveals the precarious nature of the current market. We are one geopolitical shock or one bad German manufacturing report away from the Franc smashing through the 0.90 floor. For Swiss industry, the message is clear: hope for a German resurgence, but prepare for the Franc to remain the unshakeable fortress of the financial world.