Impact
UBS's Kelleher said that the deal would take a few weeks to close, and that UBS intends to engage in "de-risking" the "tricky businesses" run by Credit Suisse.[67] He said that Credit Suisse would continue to operate as normal until the closing of the merger, and that nothing could yet be said about the merger's impact on Credit Suisse's employees.[34] As part of the deal, UBS will wind down Credit Suisse's investment bank.[68]
Credit Suisse's largest shareholders, including SNB (9.9% stake) and sovereign wealth funds Qatar Investment Authority (6.8% stake) and Norges Bank Investment Management, are expected to take significant losses from the acquisition.[56][69]
Other Swiss banks hoped to replace Credit Suisse as the country's second-largest. Zurich Cantonal Bank CEO Urs Baumann said that his firm "offers all business areas of a universal bank and is thus a complement to the newly emerging big bank".[70] The stock of Julius Baer Group, which became the country's second-largest bank by assets after Credit Suisse's collapse, rose by 13% during the week after the UBS acquisition.[71]
The takeover resulted in $17 billion of Credit Suisse-issued AT1 bonds being written off as worthless, which undermined the creditworthiness of the newly acquired bank. Property rights have also been described by shareholders as weakened in Switzerland because the transaction bypassed any shareholders' statutory approval.[72] A bond selloff resulting from AT1 bond wipeout prompted UBS to buy back €2.75billion worth of bonds that it issued days prior to the acquisition announcement, compensating its investors in a bid to stabilize the markets.[73][74]
Bank of America asked its traders and hedge fund clients to stop dispatching trades to Credit Suisse's dark pools as a precautionary measure following the acquisition, according to Reuters.[75]
According to BAK Economics, a Swiss economic research and consulting institute, 9,500 to 12,000 jobs are threatened in Switzerland, with job losses in Zurich estimated at between 6,500 and 8,000 FTEs.[76] The acquisition will most likely affect mid- and back-office operational jobs, plus legal, compliance, marketing, human resources, and regional positions; some UBS and Credit Suisse bank branches are next to each other. Although UBS employees are likely safer, Credit Suisse was stronger in some areas, such as domestic corporate banking. UBS will be less likely to raise salaries because employees can no longer leave for Credit Suisse. According to Tages-Anzeiger, the job cuts are expected to affect 20–30 percent of the combined workforce, or up to 30,000 jobs.[77] In August 2023, UBS declared that job losses in Switzerland would be 3,000 moving forward (UBS reported that 8,000 employees at CS have already left since 2023).[78][79]
Based on state guarantees, if there were a bankruptcy of the merged entity, every person in Switzerland would be liable for up to CHF 12,500 ($13,500).[80]
SNB's Al Khudairy resigned a week after the acquisition, citing personal reasons. A banker in Saudi Arabia told the Financial Times that "The issue of the chairman's statement did not go unnoticed amongst the senior decision makers".[81] Another said that he "was a victim of giving his honest opinion at such a tense time for Credit Suisse. In hindsight ... his answer was the right course of action".[82]
According to the SonntagsZeitung, "a handful of Credit Suisse executives were handed hundreds of millions of francs in opaque profit-sharing deals in the years leading up to the bank's collapse". It was also reported that Brady Dougan, Credit Suisse's former CEO, earned CHF71 million in bonuses after the 2008 financial crisis which saw the bank's shares plummet. Swiss Parliament is also considering reforms that would curb excessive bonuses for banks that are deemed "too big to fail".[83]
On June 14, 2023, Switzerland formed a parliamentary commission to probe the collapse of Credit Suisse.[84] In December 2024, the commission said CS had mismanaged its finances which led to its collapse, but found no mistake by the Swiss authorities themselves, in its report (but many "shortcomings", including by the Swiss National Bank and FINMA).[85] In 2025, the Swiss government proposed to increase the capital requirement for UBS. Namely, by requiring 100% capital backing for its subsidiaries abroad.[86] These new measures still need to be approved by the Swiss parliament and are subject to referendum.[87]
According to Citigroup, the new bank will account for 35% of domestic deposits, 31% of corporate loans and 26% of mortgages in Switzerland.[78] UBS will keep the Swiss business of Credit Suisse but will retire its brand. UBS says it plans to cut costs by $10 billion. UBS also announced at the end of August 2023 that money outflows have stopped at Credit Suisse.[78] UBS announced a record profit of nearly $30 billion in the second quarter of 2023 following the acquisition of Credit Suisse.[88]