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Credit Suisse Gains Most Since 2020 After Asset Outflows Halted

The bulk of the bleeding occurred in October, and the bank has since seen some assets come back in Switzerland.

Credit Suisse Gains Most Since 2020 After Asset Outflows Halted
Credit Suisse Gains Most Since 2020 After Asset Outflows Halted

Credit Suisse Group AG shares surged the most in more than two years on Friday after Chairman Axel Lehmann said liquidity was improving and the huge outflows of client assets that spooked markets were coming to an end.

Withdrawals at the Swiss lender, which surged to about 84 billion francs ($90 billion) earlier this quarter after rumors about the bank’s stability, have “basically stopped,” Lehmann said in a Bloomberg Television interview with Francine Lacqua. The bulk of the bleeding occurred in October, and the bank has since seen some assets come back in Switzerland.

WATCH: Credit Suisse Chairman Axel Lehmann says outflows “basically have stopped.”Source: Bloomberg
WATCH: Credit Suisse Chairman Axel Lehmann says outflows “basically have stopped.”Source: Bloomberg

“When I speak to clients, I already know that there are going to be inflows,” Lehmann said. “We already see it partially happening. So we have plans to continue to reach out to clients. It might take a bit of time but it will come back and we will go back to normal.”

Credit Suisse rose 9.3% in Zurich on Friday, the most since May 2020 and ending a record 13-day losing streak, as the comments calmed investors. The bank shocked markets late last month when it said clients in a matter of weeks had pulled about 10% of assets at the key wealth management unit, traditionally one of the bank’s most stable businesses.

The declines of the past weeks had pushed the shares near the level that the Swiss lender is pitching to investors in a crucial capital raise, threatening to limit the attractiveness of the offering. Credit Suisse needs funds from the rights offering to finance a major overhaul, including job cuts and the carve-out of the investment banking business. The plan has met with skepticism from analysts and investors concerned about the complexity of the restructuring. 

Credit Suisse Gains Most Since 2020 After Asset Outflows Halted

“I think core shareholders believe us and they will exercise their rights,” Lehmann said, adding he’s in regular discussions with investors. “Of course, when you’re an investor in Credit Suisse for 20 years and you see where the share price is, these are challenging discussions.”

Investors also took comfort from comments by Lehmann that the main indicators of the bank’s financial stability were strong and that its level of liquidity was improving after declines in recent weeks. The Zurich-based bank’s liquidity coverage ratio, which measures the quantity of easily-sold assets available to meet obligations, is currently at 140%, Lehmann said.

Credit Suisse reported last week that the metric had dropped to between 120% and 130% on a spot basis, from a level of around 190% at the end of the third quarter. In October, outflows of assets and the subsequent use of liquidity buffers had caused the bank to fall below certain regulatory levels at some of its entities.

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