Swiss government unveils comprehensive banking reform package including tighter capital requirements and increased supervisory powers, drawing on lessons from the Credit Suisse situation.

"If a bank does not behave correctly, the supervisory authority should be able to impose fines."
"Losses in the value of these subsidiaries should therefore no longer affect the hard equity of the parent company in Switzerland."
Switzerland is rewriting the rulebook on global finance. In a decisive move that signals the end of the "light touch" era, the Federal Council has unveiled a sweeping reform package designed to prevent another Credit Suisse-style catastrophe. This is not merely a suggestion; it is a mandate. On Friday, the government adopted key measures that fundamentally alter how systemically important banks operate within our borders, drawing a hard line in the sand against corporate recklessness.
Drawing directly from the scathing April 2024 banking stability report and the Parliamentary Oversight Committeeâs investigation into the Credit Suisse debacle, the message is clear: stability is non-negotiable. The reforms target the very heart of the financial system, imposing stricter capital adequacy requirements and demanding unprecedented transparency. The government is moving with urgency, opening immediate consultations to ensure that the Swiss financial center remains robust, resilient, and, crucially, accountable.
The era of partial capitalization is over. In a move that will send shockwaves through boardrooms, the Federal Council is demanding that systemically important banksâspecifically targeting the colossal UBSâdeduct a staggering 100% of the book value of their foreign subsidiaries from their hard equity. Currently, banks enjoy a lenient partial deduction regime, but that loophole is being slammed shut.
The logic is brutal but necessary: losses incurred abroad must never again threaten the solvency of the Swiss parent company. By enforcing a full deduction, the government is effectively building a firewall around the Swiss economy. While the Federal Council has stopped short of demanding a general increase in equity capital across the board, this targeted measure ensures that the parent company's equity remains unpolluted by foreign volatility. This is 'Fortress Switzerland' in actionâprioritizing domestic stability over global expansionist risks.
For years, critics have derided the Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) as a toothless tiger. That ends now. Under the new regime, the regulator is being armed with the power to impose direct finesâa critical tool previously missing from its arsenal. The Federal Councilâs directive is explicit: if a bank misbehaves, the consequences will be financial, immediate, and severe.
But the reforms go beyond monetary penalties. The government is enforcing a culture of personal responsibility. Banks will now be legally required to name specific individuals responsible for decisions, eliminating the 'collective irresponsibility' that often plagues large institutions. This 'Senior Managers Regime' means there is nowhere to hide. If misconduct occurs, regulators will know exactly whose door to knock on, and they will have the authority to intervene earlier and more aggressively than ever before.
Executive compensation is no longer a guaranteed windfall. The Federal Council is taking direct aim at the bonus culture that incentivized the high-risk behavior leading to Credit Suisse's downfall. While stopping short of a total banâciting fears that higher fixed salaries would make banks too rigid during crisesâthe government is introducing mandatory blocking periods for bonuses at the four systemically important banks: UBS, Postfinance, Raiffeisen, and ZĂźrcher Kantonalbank.
The message to bankers is stark: your money is at risk. In the event of misconduct, bonuses that have been awarded but not yet paid must be slashed or cancelled entirely. Even more dramatically, the reforms allow for the 'clawback' of variable remuneration that has already been paid out. If a senior executive mismanages the bank, they will be held financially accountable, potentially having to return millions. This aligns personal financial risk with the long-term health of the institution, forcing executives to think beyond the next quarter.
The clock is ticking. The government has already launched the first consultation on the Capital Adequacy Ordinance, which runs until September 29, signaling that these are not distant plans but imminent realities. However, the full weight of these reforms will hit the sector in phases, with critical liquidity and reporting provisions set to apply from January 2027 at the earliest.
Banks will soon face a rigorous new reality where they must submit detailed scenarios and analyses, allowing FINMA to assess their liquidity status at any moment. Further consultations on foreign subsidiary capital requirements are slated for this autumn, with additional regulations following in the first half of 2026. The timeline is aggressive, the scope is massive, and the implications are permanent. Switzerland is forging a new financial identityâone where stability commands a premium, and "too big to fail" no longer means "too big to jail."