Banking Regulation 2023

Last Updated October 25, 2022

Switzerland

Law and Practice

Authors



Schellenberg Wittmer Ltd has a banking and finance group in Zurich and Geneva comprised of more than 20 Swiss lawyers with in-depth understanding of the regulatory environment of all types of financial institutions and the domestic and international financial markets. Many of the practice lawyers have gained in-house experience while working for banks, asset managers, regulators and international law firms. The firm’s experience and expertise, together with the size of the team, enables it to provide top-quality and tailor-made advice on finance transactions and regulatory issues of every type. The team regularly acts on behalf of Swiss and foreign banks and other financial institutions, such as investment firms, insurance companies, fund management companies and asset managers, across a broad range of regulatory matters, including the establishment and licensing of financial institutions in Switzerland, the regulation of financial services and other activities subject to prudential supervision or regulation, the structuring of capital transactions for banks, M&A of financial institutions, and audit mandates granted by FINMA for investigations in financial institutions.

FINMA as Regulator of the Banking Sector

Swiss banks and Swiss branch offices or representative offices of foreign banks are subject to prudential supervision by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA).

Principal Laws and Regulations for Banks

The Swiss Federal Banking Act of 8 November 1934 (Banking Act) and the ordinances issued thereunder are the relevant pieces of legislation governing banks under Swiss law.

The key ordinances under the Banking Act include:

  • the Swiss Federal Banking Ordinance of 30 April 2014 (Banking Ordinance);
  • the Capital Adequacy Ordinance of 1 June 2012 (Capital Adequacy Ordinance), covering the rules on capital requirements for all banks and securities firms, including banks of systemic importance;
  • the FINMA Ordinance on the insolvency of banks and securities firms of 30 August 2012 (BIO-FINMA);
  • the Ordinance on the liquidity of banks and securities firms of 30 November 2012 (Liquidity Ordinance);
  • the Ordinance on foreign banks in Switzerland of 21 October 1996 (Foreign Banks Ordinance); and
  • the FINMA Ordinance on accounting rules of 31 October 2019 (the FINMA Accounting Ordinance).

FINMA issues circulars on various topics, specifying its supervisory practice (see finma.ch). In addition, various self-regulatory organisations (in particular the Swiss Banking Association – SBA) issue regulations that affect the banking business (eg, the Agreement on the Swiss banks’ code of conduct with regard to the exercise of due diligence – CDB 20: www.swissbanking.org).

Further Relevant Laws and Regulations

Other laws and regulations that are most relevant for the banking sector include:

  • the Swiss Financial Market Supervision Act of 22 June 2007 (FINMASA), including the competences of FINMA to proceed with enforcement actions and issue sanctions in respect of firms subject to FINMA supervision;
  • the Swiss National Bank Act of 3 October 2003 (NBA) and the ordinance thereto of 18 March 2004 (NBO), setting out the regulatory framework for the Swiss National Bank (SNB) and its powers;
  • the Swiss Financial Institutions Act of 15 June 2018 (FinIA) and the ordinance thereto of 6 November 2019 (FinIO), including the rules on the prudential supervision of securities firms, asset managers, asset managers of collective investment schemes, fund management companies and trustees, as well as the licensing requirements for foreign financial institutions (other than banks) with a Swiss branch of representative office;
  • the Swiss Financial Services Act of 15 June 2018 (FinSA) and the ordinance thereto of 6 November 2019 (FinSO), including the rules of conduct for financial services providers, the organisational requirements for financial services providers, registration requirements for financial services providers not subject to prudential supervision in Switzerland, the obligation to adhere to an ombudsman service for financial services providers not only interacting with professional or institutional clients, and the primary market rules for securities offerings;
  • the Swiss Financial Market Infrastructure Act of 19 June 2015 (FMIA) and the ordinance thereto of 25 November 2015 (FMIO), including the rules governing financial market infrastructure (including trading venues for securities, central counterparties, central securities depositories and payment systems), the rules of conduct for dealing in OTC derivatives and exchange-traded derivatives, the rules on the disclosure of significant shareholders in listed companies and the rules on market abuse and insider dealing;
  • the Swiss Federal Act on Combating Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing of 10 October 1997 (AMLA) and the ordinance thereto of 11 November 2015 (AMLO);
  • the FINMA Ordinance on Combating Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing of 3 June 2015 (AMLO-FINMA), including the rules on implementing the AML framework by FINMA-regulated financial institutions; and
  • the Swiss Federal Act dated 25 September 2020 on amendments to several acts in view of accommodating requirements of distributed ledger technology (DLT), which fully entered into force on 1 August 2021 (DLT Act).

Types of Licences

A bank incorporated in Switzerland can apply for the following types of licences:

  • a full banking licence in the sense of Article 1a of the Swiss Banking Act (Bank Licence); and
  • a bank licence in the sense of Article 1b of the Swiss Banking Act (Fintech Licence).

Foreign banks can apply for the following types of licences, depending on the type of activity conducted in Switzerland:

  • a licence as a Swiss branch of a foreign bank duly licensed and supervised in its place of incorporation, if it operates an office in Switzerland that enters into transactions, maintains client accounts or commits the bank legally (Swiss Branch Licence); or
  • a licence as a representative office of a foreign bank duly licensed and supervised in its place of incorporation, if it operates in another way in or from Switzerland – eg, by passing on client orders to the foreign bank or representing it for advertising or other purposes (introducing broker) regarding banking services in the sense of the Banking Act or financial services in the sense of the FinSA (Swiss Representative Office Licence).

Where a foreign bank does not have a presence in Switzerland and does not engage in the activity of an introducing broker in Switzerland as regards banking or financial services, an inbound cross-border activity alone is currently not subject to a licensing requirement.

However, separately from such licensing requirements, please note that a question arises as to what extent a foreign bank must register front-office staff dealing with clients in Switzerland with a registration body for client advisers in the sense of Article 28 et seq of FinSA. While this is not the case for front-office staff based in a Swiss branch of a foreign bank that is duly licensed by FINMA with a Swiss Branch Licence, the registration requirement arises if a foreign bank only has a Swiss Representative Office Licence or if it acts in Switzerland on a mere cross-border basis, provided that the foreign bank interacts with retail clients.

Categories of Banks

Depending on the balance sheet total, the assets under management, the deposits subject to a depositor protection scheme and the own funds, FINMA classifies banks into categories 1 to 5, with category 1 being the largest banks requiring most attention from the regulator. The category allocated to each bank is published on www.finma.ch.

In addition to such categorisation, FINMA and the SNB are mandated to identify Swiss banks of systemic importance for the Swiss market in terms of size, interconnectedness with the financial system and the economy, and the short-term substitutability of the services provided by the bank. In making this assessment, particular attention must be paid to the importance of the deposit and lending business, the importance of the payment transaction business, the amount of secured deposits, the ratio between the balance sheet total and the annual Swiss gross domestic product and the risk profile of the bank (Article 8 para 2 of the Banking Act). Initially, only UBS and Credit Suisse were classified as systemically important banks (SIBs), but the Zurich Cantonal Bank, Raiffeisen and Postfinance have since been added.

On the other end of the scale, Swiss banks categorised by FINMA in categories 4 or 5 may opt-in to a “small banks regime” if they have own funds resulting in a simplified leverage ratio of at least 8% (calculated as the CET1 capital divided by the total balance sheet without the goodwill, participations and off-balance sheet positions), an average liquidity ratio of at least 110% and a refinancing ratio of at least 100% (calculated as the ratio of (i) the liabilities resulting from deposits, money market obligations, debt obligations and covered bonds with a remaining term of more than one year and own funds divided by (ii) the claims against clients and counterparties, including claims resulting from mortgage lending). These thresholds must be met on an entity and group-wide level. If FINMA agrees to grant such “small bank” status, the own funds requirements are not calculated according to the minimum requirements that would otherwise apply pursuant to Articles 41-46 of the Capital Adequacy Ordinance.

Activities and Services Covered by a Bank Licence

The following activities trigger a requirement for a Bank Licence:

  • accepting, or offering to accept, deposits from 20 or more persons or companies on an ongoing basis, provided that this calculation would not take into account any deposits received from:
    1. banks or other companies subject to prudential supervision;
    2. shareholders holding at least 10% of the voting rights or the capital and affiliates thereof or persons related to such shareholders;
    3. institutional investors with professional treasury operations;
    4. employees or former employees; and
    5. persons benefiting from a guarantee by a bank licensed by FINMA; and
  • providing financing to an unlimited number of unaffiliated persons or companies, provided that this activity shall be refinanced by unaffiliated banks.

For these purposes, deposits would include any liabilities except the following:

  • deposits held by securities or precious metal traders, asset managers or similar businesses (but not by a “currency trader”) in settlement accounts for their clients, provided that such settlement accounts are exclusively used for the execution of client transactions that will occur in the foreseeable future, the settlement accounts are not interest-bearing and the funds are on-transferred within a maximum period of 60 days (such maximum time period does not apply to deposits held with securities traders);
  • deposits held in settlement accounts with DLT multilateral trading facilities, provided that such accounts are not interest-bearing;
  • funds paid as consideration for goods or services;
  • bonds and other fungible debt obligations issued on the basis of offering documentation, including certain minimum information specified in the Banking Ordinance;
  • funds up to CHF3,000 pre-paid to a payment solution in view of a future use for the payment as consideration for goods or services, provided that no interest is paid on such funds;
  • funds guaranteed by a Swiss bank; and
  • funds paid on a life insurance or social security plan.

A “sandbox” exemption allows a deposit-taking activity without triggering a banking licence if the deposits are below CHF1 million and are not reinvested with the aim of generating a profit, and if the depositors are informed that the entity is not licensed as a bank and that they do not benefit from a depositor protection scheme.

According to Article 6 of FinIA, and because the Bank Licence is the “highest status” in the hierarchy of FINMA licences, an entity licensed as a Swiss bank may conduct the regulated activities of the following entities:

  • a securities firm;
  • an asset manager of collective investment schemes;
  • an asset manager of assets not held in a collective investment scheme; and
  • a trustee.

Activities and Services Covered by a Fintech Licence

The Fintech Licence is applicable to companies that either accept deposits from the public up to a maximum of CHF100 million or hold crypto-assets that serve a payment purpose (eg, cryptocurrencies) for depositors in omnibus accounts (subject to the general exemptions from a deposit-taking activity), provided in both cases that such deposits or crypto-assets are not reinvested and not interest-bearing. FINMA may increase the CHF100 million threshold in particular cases if customers are adequately protected.

The Fintech Bank Licence requires investors to be informed in advance about the business model, the services provided and the risks associated with the technologies used, that the deposits are not covered by a deposit protection system and that there is no immediate reimbursement in the case of bankruptcy.

The accepted deposits must be held separately from the company’s own funds. The deposits have to be held in the currency they were made as sight deposits or as highly liquid assets. Deposits in the form of crypto-assets have to be held in the same type of crypto-assets (ie, the same cryptocurrency or the same tokens) as they were accepted from the clients.

Conditions for Granting a Bank Licence

FINMA requires Swiss banks to meet the following licensing conditions.

  • Legal form: the Banking Act does not provide for any special rules regarding the legal form of banks, with the exception of the cantonal banks that are established as public entities or joint stock corporations under the relevant legislation of the Canton pursuant to Article 3a of the Banking Act.
  • Minimum capital: the bank must have a fully paid-up minimum capital of CHF10 million (Article 3 para 2 lit b of the Banking Act and Article 15 of the Banking Ordinance).
  • Business activity description: in accordance with Article 3 para 2 lit a of the Banking Act and Article 9 of the Banking Ordinance, a bank is obliged to precisely define its business area in the articles of association and organisational regulations in terms of subject matter and area of operation. The scope of tasks and the geographical area of operation must be aligned with the financial possibilities and the administrative organisation.
  • Organisation: Article 3 para 2 lit a of the Banking Act requires that separate bodies must be set up for management and for the supervision and control of at least three members. According to Article 11 of the Banking Ordinance, no member of the body responsible for the overall supervision and control may be a member of the management. In accordance with Article 12 of the Banking Ordinance, the bank must also ensure an internal separation of functions between trading, asset management and settlement.
  • Internal controls: the bank must set up an internal control system and appoint an “internal audit” function that is independent from the management, in addition to appointing external auditors (see 4.1 Corporate Governance Requirements).
  • Fit and proper requirements: members of the management and the material shareholders (ie, shareholders holding at least 10% of the capital or voting rights) must meet the relevant fit and proper requirements (see 4.2 Registration and Oversight of Senior Management).
  • Operation in Switzerland: the bank must be managed in Switzerland, with the management being present in Switzerland.
  • Foreign-controlled banks: if a foreign shareholder holds at least 50% of the capital or voting rights or otherwise exercises control, FINMA may require the relevant jurisdiction to grant reciprocity (see 3.1 Requirements for Acquiring or Increasing Control over a Bank).
  • Consolidated supervision: if the bank is part of a foreign-controlled financial group, FINMA may require that it is subject to appropriate consolidated supervision by foreign supervisory authorities (Article 3b of the Banking Act), and the licence may be subject to the approval of the relevant foreign supervisory authority. Not all jurisdictions meet the requirement of “adequate consolidated supervision” within the meaning of the Banking Act.

Conditions for Granting a Fintech Licence

FINMA requires Swiss banks with a Fintech Licence to meet the following licensing requirements.

  • Legal form: it must be established as a joint stock corporation (Aktiengesellschaft), a partnership limited by shares (Kommanditaktiengesellschaft) or a limited liability company (Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung).
  • Minimum capital: the bank must have a fully paid-up minimum capital of at least 3% of the deposits it has taken; such capital must be at least CHF300,000 (Article 17a of the Banking Ordinance).
  • Business activity description: the bank is obliged to precisely define its business area in the articles of association and organisational regulations in terms of subject matter and area of operation. The scope of tasks and the geographical area of operation must be aligned with the financial possibilities and the administrative organisation (Article 14b of the Banking Ordinance).
  • Organisation: separate bodies must be set up for management and for the supervision and control of at least three members. According to Article 14d para 2 of the Banking Ordinance, at least a third of the members of the body responsible for the overall supervision and control must be independent from the management.
  • Internal controls: the bank must set up an internal control system and appoint an “internal audit” function that is independent from the management, in addition to appointing external auditors.
  • Fit and proper requirements: members of the management and the material shareholders (ie, shareholders holding at least 10% of the capital or voting rights) must meet the relevant fit and proper requirements.
  • Operation in Switzerland: the bank must be managed in Switzerland, with the management being present in Switzerland (Article 14c of the Banking Act).

Conditions for Licensing Foreign Banks

As regards a Branch Office Licence and a Representative Office Licence, the relevant requirements set out in the Foreign Bank Ordinance must be met.

Duty to Notify FINMA

Any natural or legal person that intends to hold or cease to hold a qualified participation in a bank, directly or indirectly, is required to notify FINMA in advance. A qualified participation exists if a natural person or legal entity holds directly or indirectly at least 10% of the capital or the voting rights of a bank, or can otherwise exercise significant influence over the management of the bank. The duty to notify also applies to the holder of a participation who intends to increase or decrease that participation above or below the thresholds of 10%, 20%, 33% and 50%. The bank must report to FINMA any person who is acquiring or selling a qualified participation or whose participation increases or decreases below the thresholds of 10%, 20%, 33% and 50%. The bank must update its list of qualified participants at least once a year.

Proper Business Conduct Requirement

Any person who intends to hold a qualified participation in a bank must guarantee that the influence to be acquired will not be used in a way that is detrimental to the prudent and proper management of the bank. To assess compliance with the proper business conduct requirement, FINMA must be provided with certain indications and documents, as set forth in Article 8 of the Banking Ordinance. In addition, any person acquiring a qualified participation must indicate whether the participation is acquired for own account or on a fiduciary basis, and whether any options or similar rights will be granted on the participation.

Banks under Foreign Control

If a Swiss-controlled bank passes under foreign control as a result of the acquisition of a participation, it must require an additional licence from FINMA. A new additional licence is also required if there is any change in a qualified participation held by a foreigner in a foreign-controlled bank. A bank is under foreign control if foreigners holding qualified participations directly or indirectly hold more than half of the voting rights, or if the bank is controlled in any other way by foreigners. A “foreigner” is either a physical person who has neither Swiss nationality nor a type C Swiss residence permit, or a legal entity whose registered office is located abroad or that is controlled directly or indirectly by foreigners.

The granting of the additional licence is subject to the following conditions:

  • reciprocity must be guaranteed by the countries in which the foreigners holding the qualified participation have their domicile or registered office (however, reciprocity does not need to be verified in the case of contradictory provisions in international agreements, such as vis-à-vis the member states of the World Trade Organization);
  • the bank’s corporate name must not indicate or suggest a Swiss character of the bank; and
  • if the bank becomes part of a financial group or financial conglomerate, FINMA may make the granting of the additional licence dependent on the approval of the transaction by the competent foreign supervisory authority and appropriate consolidated supervision.

Overview

Banks must comply with the specific corporate governance requirements defined in the banking legislation, particularly the Banking Act and the Banking Ordinance, as well as in various FINMA circulars, particularly FINMA Circular 2017/1 “Corporate governance – banks” and, to the extent applicable, with the general corporate governance requirements set forth in Swiss corporate law.

Board of Directors

The board of directors of the bank must be comprised of at least three members. A third of the board members must be independent, and none of the independent board members is allowed to be part of the bank’s executive management, unless FINMA agrees to grant an exception. Banks in supervisory categories 1 to 3 must establish an audit committee and a risk committee (these committees may be combined into a single committee in banks assigned to supervisory category 3). The audit and risk committees must be comprised of a majority of independent board members. The chairman of the board of directors cannot be a member of these committees. In addition, systemically important institutions must establish a compensation and nomination committee, at least at group level.

The board of directors is the governing body for the guidance, supervision and control of the institution. It has specific duties regarding the bank’s business strategy and risk policy, organisation, financial situation, personnel and other resources, as well as the monitoring and control of the executive management, and is responsible for taking decisions on major structural changes and investments.

Executive Management

The executive management is responsible for conducting the operational business activities of the bank in accordance with the strategy, targets and internal regulations set forth by the board of directors. It has specific duties and responsibilities in terms of financial and risk management, representation of the institution towards third parties, the transmission of information to the board of directors, and the establishment of effective internal processes, including an appropriate management information system, an internal control system and the necessary technological infrastructure.

Risk Management Framework and Internal Control System

Banks must adopt and maintain an institution-wide risk management framework that defines their risk policy and risk tolerance as well as the corresponding risk limits in all key risk categories. In addition, the internal control system must provide for at least two controlling bodies: the revenue-generating units and the controlling bodies independent therefrom (covering the risk control and compliance functions).

Internal Audit

Banks must have an internal audit function, in addition to their regulatory audit firm. The internal audit function can be internalised or delegated, inter alia, to the internal audit of a group company if certain requirements are met or to an external audit firm that is independent from the bank’s regulatory audit firm. The internal audit function reports directly to the board of directors and has an unlimited right of inspection, information and audit within the institution in the context of its duties.

Other Organisational Requirements

Banks face numerous other organisational requirements, depending on the type of activities conducted.

Board of Directors

The board of directors must have adequate management expertise and specialist knowledge and experience of the banking and financial services sector. It must be sufficiently diversified so that all key aspects of the business are adequately represented, including finance, accounting and risk management. Board members are appointed by the shareholders’ meeting (if the bank is organised in the form of a joint stock company).

The board of directors must define the requirements for its members, the chairman and the members of its committees. The board of directors must critically assess its performance at least once a year and must record the results in writing.

Executive Management

The members of the executive management, both individually and as an overall body, must have adequate management expertise and the specialist knowledge and experience of banking and financial services required to ensure compliance with licensing requirements in the context of the bank’s operational activities. They are appointed by the board of directors, which must also appoint the chief risk officer and the head of internal audit. The requirements for the chief executive officer are defined by the board of directors, which also approves and periodically reviews the requirements for the other members of the executive management, the chief risk officer and the head of internal audit.

Good Reputation and Proper Business Conduct

Each member of the board of directors and executive management must maintain a good reputation and fulfil the requirement of proper business conduct (“fit and proper” requirements). Any change in the board of directors or the executive management must be notified to and approved by FINMA prior to such change occurring. The information and documents to be provided to FINMA are set out in Article 8 of the Banking Ordinance and the relevant FINMA guidelines. Members of the executive management must have their domicile in a place that allows them to perform their tasks in an effective and responsible manner.

Compensation System for Independent Control Bodies

As a general rule, the compensation system for the members of the independent control bodies and the internal audit function must not create incentives that could lead to conflicts of interest with the duties of these bodies or function.

FINMA Circular 2010/1

FINMA has adopted Circular 2010/1 “Remuneration schemes”, defining the minimum standards for the design, implementation and disclosure of remuneration schemes in financial institutions. It defines the various principles that must be reflected in the bank’s remuneration policy, including that the structure and level of total remuneration must be designed so as to enhance risk awareness, and that variable remuneration must be funded through the long-term economic performance of the bank and shall depend on sustainable and justifiable criteria reflecting the bank’s business and risk policies.

However, this circular only applies to banks that are required to maintain equity capital of at least CHF10 billion, either in their capacity as a single entity or at the financial group or conglomerate level. All other banks are recommended to follow the principles set out therein as best practice guidelines.

Specific Provisions for Systemically Important Banks and Listed Companies

The Banking Act provides for the right of the Swiss Federal Council to impose measures relating to remuneration packages for employees of systemically important banks or their group company if they receive state aid from federal funds.

Finally, if the bank is a listed company, it must follow the remuneration requirements applicable to listed companies, particularly those set forth in the Ordinance against Excessive Remuneration in Listed Companies Limited by Shares.

The AMLO-FINMA specifies the general provisions in the AMLA and sets out how Swiss banks must implement the obligations to combat money laundering and terrorist financing. Regarding the requirements for the identification of the contracting parties and the determination of the beneficial owner of assets, the AMLO-FINMA refers to the provisions of the Agreement on the Swiss banks’ code of conduct with regard to the exercise of due diligence of 13 June 2018 (CDB 20).

Swiss banks must identify natural persons by an official identification document with a photograph. In the case of legal entities and partnerships, the identification of the contracting party generally takes place by means of an official register extract. Banks must further record the means by which the identity has been verified and put a copy of the correspondent identification documents on record. A business relationship can be established in person, by correspondence or via the internet (in accordance with the applicable FINMA Circular 2016/7 “Video and online identification”).

The contracting party of a Swiss bank is required to declare the beneficial owner (natural person) of the assets. The beneficial owner of an operating legal entity is defined as the natural person who ultimately controls the legal entity (controlling person). The contracting party must record the information of the beneficial owner or controlling person by means of a written declaration or specific form as provided by CDB 20.

According to the AMLO-FINMA, among others, details of payment transactions must be indicated, the reasons for using domiciliary companies must be clarified, and criteria for identifying business relationships or transactions with increased risks must be developed. In the case of business relationships or transactions with increased risks, Swiss banks are required to make additional clarifications.

Swiss banks shall prepare documentary evidence of the transactions carried out and the clarifications required, and shall ensure checks and the adequate training of staff.

Swiss banks must immediately report the following to the Money Laundering Reporting Office (MROS):

  • if they know or have reasonable grounds to suspect that the assets involved in the business relationship are connected with money laundering or criminal organisations, derive from a crime or a qualified tax offence, or serve to finance terrorism;
  • if they terminate negotiations for the establishment of a business relationship on reasonable suspicion in accordance with the above; or
  • if they know or have reason to suspect, on the basis of the investigations carried out, that the data of a person or organisation forwarded by a supervisory authority or organisation corresponds to the data of a person of their own business relationships or transactions.

Swiss banks must block the assets entrusted to them as soon as MROS informs them that it will forward their report under the first point above to a prosecution authority, but must immediately block any assets that are connected with a report under the third point above. Swiss banks may inform neither the person concerned nor third parties that they have made a report to MROS.

In Switzerland, clients’ cash deposits are protected by both the depositor protection scheme and the preferential treatment granted in the event of a bank’s bankruptcy. Deposits totalling CHF100,000 per client are regarded as privileged deposits.

In essence, depositor protection is based on a three-tiered system.

First, privileged deposits are immediately paid out from the remaining liquidity of the failed bank. FINMA immediately determines the maximum amount of deposits payable immediately. As a result, the largest possible number of retail clients will be paid out before bankruptcy proceedings are instituted. Because immediate pay-out in relation to clients of foreign offices has proven difficult in practice, the Banking Act will be revised to allow for a pay-out as soon as actually and legally possible in relation to such clients. The revision is expected to enter into force in early 2023.

Secondly, if the bank’s available liquidity fails to cover all privileged deposits, the depositor protection scheme is used to pay out privileged deposits, provided that they were booked in Switzerland (so-called secured deposits). All banks in Switzerland that accept client deposits are obliged to participate in the depositor protection scheme. When FINMA has declared bankruptcy, it notifies the depositor protection scheme and informs it about the liquidity required to pay out the secured deposits. Within a period of 20 days, the other members of the association will provide the required funds to FINMA or its agent, up to a maximum amount of CHF6 billion. The members of the association are legally required to keep half of the amount that they are obliged to contribute as additional liquidity. As an additional measure towards achieving full payment of all privileged deposits at the latest during bankruptcy proceedings, such deposits are underpinned with domestically held assets, easily accessible by FINMA. In addition, the depositor protection scheme will be revised and this revision is expected to enter into force in early 2023. The revised depositor protection scheme will, amongst other measures, provide for a faster pay-out scheme (ie, seven days for the payment to FINMA’s agent and seven additional days for the payment by FINMA’s agent to the clients) and an increase of the protected amount to CHF6 billion or 1.6% of the total secured deposits of all participating banks, whichever is higher.

Thirdly, privileged deposits are treated preferentially and are paid out at the same time as other second-class claims in the event of bankruptcy – ie, after first-class claims such as employee salary and pension fund claims have been paid out.

Unlike cash deposits in bank accounts, other assets such as shares, units in collective investment schemes and other securities held in custodial accounts are client property, and are ring-fenced in their entirety and released to clients in the event of bankruptcy.

Deposits with pension and vested benefits foundations, particularly vested benefits accounts and pillar 3a pension funds, benefit from a separate privilege up to a maximum of CHF100,000 per client in addition to the privileged deposits of the client itself. However, these deposits do not fall under the depositor protection scheme but are treated preferentially in the event of bankruptcy and qualify as second-class claims.

Client deposits and pension savings of more than CHF100,000 per client are regarded as third-class claims and are treated the same as the claims of other non-privileged creditors.

The Banking Act is the primary law governing bank secrecy in Switzerland, Article 47 of which states that anyone who, intentionally or in negligence, discloses confidential data that has been entrusted to them in their capacity as a member of an executive or supervisory body, employee, representative or liquidator of a bank, or that they have learned when exercising their profession, is liable to prosecution. Swiss banks also have a civil law obligation to respect the confidentiality of customer data, arising out of the customer’s right to personal privacy and the contractual relationship between the customer and the bank.

The definition of confidential information is broad, and includes information on the customer as a private individual, on deposits and withdrawals, on loans, investments, the customer’s financial circumstances, etc. However, the Banking Act only protects information related to an identified or identifiable customer, so customer data may be disclosed by, for example, anonymising the customer name, account number or other identifying information, or by aggregating customer data.

Several exceptions allow a bank to disclose customer data protected by the banking secrecy obligation, including:

  • disclosure of customer data when requested under a Swiss statute requiring the disclosure of such information to a government authority;
  • disclosure to a parent company that is supervised by a banking or financial market supervisory authority if the disclosure is necessary for consolidated supervision purposes, subject to certain conditions;
  • disclosure of customer data in cases of an overriding private or public interest; and
  • disclosure of customer data to comply with agreements Switzerland has entered into with other countries (such as the OECD Model Tax Convention, the Agreement on the Automatic Exchange of Information (AEOI) or the Agreement between the USA and Switzerland for Cooperation to Facilitate the Implementation of FATCA).

In addition, in the account opening documents (including the general terms and conditions), banks typically obtain customer consent for disclosures not permitted under the Banking Act. For this purpose, banks need to clearly define the scope of consent, as a general waiver of bank secrecy is not sufficient.

The SBA published its guidelines for the secure use of cloud services in banking dated as of June 2020 (SBA Guidelines), according to which the deployment of customer identifying data (CID) to a cloud provider outside Switzerland does not constitute a breach of banking secrecy, subject to a number of specifically defined technical (eg, anonymisation, pseudonymisation or encryption, etc), organisational (eg, monitoring and auditing) and contractual (eg, specification of the proceeding in the event of requests by foreign authorities, securing the auditability at all times, definition of an access concept, etc) security measures as generally set out in the SBA Guidelines. As far as is known, the SBA Guidelines have not been endorsed by FINMA, so the risk of migrating to the cloud remains with the individual banking institutions.

In addition to the Banking Act, the Federal Act on Data Protection of 19 June 1992 (FADP) and its implementing Ordinance apply to the processing of personal data pertaining to individuals and legal persons. The Swiss Parliament adopted a general revision of the FADP in September 2020. The revised FADP will enter into force on 1 September 2023 and will only apply to data pertaining to individuals (data pertaining to legal persons will no longer be protected). In EU/EEA cross-border relationships, the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) may also need to be considered, given its extraterritorial reach.

Non-compliance with any of the general data processing principles of lawfulness, good faith, proportionality, purpose limitation and transparency would require a legal justification (ie, the data subject’s consent, overriding private or public interest or a Swiss statutory provision). In particular:

  • personal data may only be processed for the purpose indicated at the time of collection, which is evident from the circumstances or provided for by Swiss law;
  • the principle of transparency requires that the collection of personal data and the purpose of its processing must be evident to the data subject; and
  • the principle of proportionality provides that personal data is disclosed only to the extent required for the specific purpose – ie, any personal data should be appropriately anonymised, pseudonymised or encrypted or, if the customer data needs to be processed in cleartext, then access should only be granted to the extent required (eg, by the implementation of an appropriate authorisation and access concept with regard to personal data).

Finally, FINMA Circular 2018/3 “Outsourcing – banks and insurers” is applicable to the outsourcing of a function that is significant to the company’s business activities and that will be mandated to a third party in order to independently and on an ongoing basis perform all or part of such function. Significant functions are those that have a material effect on compliance with the aims and regulations of financial market legislation. Outsourcing is not considered an unlawful disclosure under the Banking Act if the outsourcing provider and its employees are obliged to comply with bank secrecy rules.

Basel III Standards

Switzerland has, to a large extent, implemented the Basel III standards by means of amendments to its Capital Adequacy Ordinance, Liquidity Ordinance and various FINMA circulars.

Capital Requirements

Subject to any exception granted by FINMA, the fully paid-in minimum share capital of a bank shall amount to at least CHF10 million, although FINMA may require a higher amount of share capital depending on the bank’s intended business activities.

Non-systemic banks must hold a minimum regulatory capital of at least 8% of their risk-weighted positions, and must have a capital buffer of between 2.5% and 4.8%. Upon the request of the SNB, an additional countercyclical buffer to address excessive credit growth risks can be introduced. The Federal Council decided in January 2022 to reactivate the countercyclical capital buffer at a level of 2.5% on loans secured against residential properties in Switzerland. The Federal Council had previously approved, in 2020, the deactivation of the countercyclical capital buffer in order to give banks more flexibility in granting credits as a way to limit the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Banks with a balance sheet amount of at least CHF250 billion, of which the total foreign commitment amounts to at least CHF10 billion, or with a total foreign commitment of at least CHF25 billion, are further required to hold an extended countercyclical buffer of up to 2.5%. Furthermore, FINMA may require a bank to hold additional capital if the minimum regulatory capital and capital buffer do not ensure an appropriate level of security in view of the specific risks faced by the bank. Finally, a non-systemic bank must maintain a minimum leverage ratio of 3% based on Tier 1 capital and its unweighted exposures (total exposure).

There are additional requirements for SIBs, which must hold enough regulatory capital to continue their operations even if they incur large losses (going concern capital) and must provide additional loss-absorbing funds (gone concern capital). The going and gone concern requirements together comprise the bank’s total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC). The going concern capital requirements for SIBs consist of the following elements:

  • a base requirement of a risk-weighted capital ratio of 12.86% and a leverage ratio of 4.5%;
  • a surcharge that depends on the degree of systemic importance; and
  • countercyclical buffers.

The gone concern capital requirements for domestic systemically important banks (D-SIBs) amount to a minimum of 40% of their going concern capital, subject to rebates. The gone concern capital requirements for the two global SIBs (G-SIBs) at the consolidated group level are 100% of their going concern capital minus certain rebates granted by FINMA.

Following a pilot phase, on 1 January 2020 FINMA implemented a small bank regime exempting small, particularly liquid and well-capitalised banks from certain regulatory requirements. Such banks benefit from less complex requirements under the Capital Adequacy Ordinance, which allows them, for instance, to forego the calculation of risk-weighted positions. Please see 2.1 Licences and Application Process for a description of the requirements that a bank must meet in order to be allowed to participate in the small bank regime.

Risk Diversification

Banks are obliged to limit concentration risks and must comply with various requirements in this respect. The standard upper limit for any large exposure is, in principle, 25% of the bank’s adjusted eligible core capital (Tier 1), save for any exceptions or other specific requirements provided in the Capital Adequacy Ordinance and in FINMA Circular 2019/1 “Risk diversification – banks”.

Liquidity Requirements

The Liquidity Ordinance implemented Basel III’s liquidity standards into Swiss law, and regulates the qualitative and quantitative liquidity requirements applicable to banks. Further specifications are contained in FINMA Circular 2015/2 “Liquidity risks – banks”.

Under the Liquidity Ordinance, banks are required to appropriately manage and monitor their liquidity risks.

A liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) has been introduced into the Liquidity Ordinance in accordance with international liquidity standards, and shall ensure that banks have an adequate portfolio of high-quality liquid assets (HQLA) to cover the expected net cash outflow for a 30 calendar day liquidity stress scenario on an ongoing basis. Banks have to report their LCR to the SNB on a monthly basis.

The net stable funding ratio (NSFR) was introduced into the Liquidity Ordinance on 1 July 2021 and ensures that the stability of a bank’s funding over a one-year horizon is guaranteed at all times. Banks have to report on the NSFR to the SNB at various frequencies, depending on their classification.

SIBs are subject to more stringent liquidity requirements than non-systemic banks.

Applicable Insolvency Rules

The Banking Act sets out the debt enforcement and insolvency proceedings in Articles 25 et seq, as further specified in the BIO-FINMA. These provisions apply to banks licensed in Switzerland under the Banking Act (with either a Bank Licence or a Fintech Licence). They also apply to material group companies of a bank, to securities firms and to fund management companies regulated under the FinIA and licensed by FINMA.

According to Articles 25 et seq of the Banking Act, where FINMA has reason to believe that a bank it regulates or supervises either is over-indebted or has incurred serious liquidity problems, or does not fulfil the capital requirements upon a respective rectification period granted by FINMA, it may, as appropriate:

  • take protective measures under Article 26 of the Banking Act;
  • initiate bank reorganisation proceedings under Articles 28-32 of the Banking Act; or
  • order the liquidation of the bank (bankruptcy proceedings) under Articles 33 et seq of the Banking Act.

The Swiss Parliament adopted, on 17 December 2021, an amendment to the Banking Act largely focused on amendments to the rules on bank reorganisation proceedings. These rules are expected to enter into force in early 2023.

Protective Measures

Protective measures may be ordered by FINMA either on a standalone basis or in connection with bank reorganisation proceedings or the liquidation of a bank. Article 26 para 1 of the Banking Act mentions the following protective measures:

  • instructions to the corporate bodies of the bank;
  • the appointment of an investigating officer;
  • the withdrawal of the power of the corporate bodies to represent the bank or the removal of the corporate bodies from office;
  • the removal of the bank auditors or corporate auditors from office;
  • a restriction on the business activities of the bank;
  • a prohibition on making or receiving payments or entering into securities transactions;
  • the closure of the bank; and
  • ordering a stay (Stundung) or postponement of maturity (Fälligkeitsaufschub), except for debts owed to central mortgage bond institutions (Pfandbriefzentralen), which are secured by a pledge.

The above list of measures is not exhaustive and FINMA may also take other measures, as it deems appropriate. From a Swiss perspective, any such protective measures ordered by FINMA may also be ordered in respect of the bank’s assets located outside Switzerland in a foreign branch.

Reorganisation Proceedings

Reorganisation proceedings may be ordered by FINMA if there is a reasonable expectation that the failing bank may be successfully restructured or if at least some parts of it may be saved from insolvency. In such event, FINMA may appoint an administrator (Sanierungsbeauftragter) and regulate the business activities of the bank during such proceedings (Article 28 of the Banking Act). Where reorganisation proceedings are commenced, a reorganisation plan will be prepared by the administrator, which must be approved by FINMA (such approval may occur when FINMA resolves to commence the reorganisation proceedings). There is no requirement for an approval by a general shareholders’ meeting of the bank (Article 31 of the Banking Act). Moreover, the creditors of an SIB may not reject the reorganisation plan (Article 31a para 3 of the Banking Act).

A reorganisation plan may provide for the transfer of the entire business of the financial institution or certain parts of the assets and liabilities as well as contracts to another legal entity (eg, a bridge bank), or for a bail-in of debt, or for a haircut on claims. Under the new rules that are expected to enter into force in early 2023, FINMA will also be able to order (ie, in addition to the transfer of assets, liabilities and contracts) that (i) the bank merges with another company to form a new legal entity, (ii) another legal entity takes over the bank or (iii) the legal form of the bank is changed.

If the reorganisation plan provides for a bail-in of debt or a haircut on claims, such measures must ensure that, after a reorganisation, the bank meets the capital requirements necessary for the purposes of continuing business activities. In any such case, Swiss law provides for a creditors’ hierarchy (waterfall). Under such rules, before a bail-in of debt or a haircut on claims would apply, the share capital must be reduced exhaustively, any contingent convertibles or other capital instruments qualifying as Additional Tier 1 Capital or Tier 2 Capital must be converted into equity or written off, and any other claims ranking junior must be converted into equity or written off. In such a waterfall, deposits (in respect of the amount not protected by any deposit insurance scheme) would rank last.

Any such bail-in of debt or haircut could not be applied in respect of privileged claims (eg, deposits up to CHF100,000 – see 6.1 Depositor Protection Regime), secured claims up to the value of the collateral assets and, under certain conditions, claims subject to a right of set-off.

At present, however, such reorganisation proceedings do not yet take into account the specificities of a bank owned by the sovereign (eg, a Cantonal Bank) in some key respects (eg, regarding the order of bailing-in shareholders and creditors). In this context, under the new rules that are expected to enter into force in early 2023, FINMA shall take into account the particular situation of a Cantonal Bank with a state guarantee, and FINMA shall consult with the Canton in the context of deciding on the application of reorganisation proceedings. Under these new rules, FINMA may agree to exemptions from the general reorganisation rules, particularly as regards the order in which debt is bailed-in, in view of applying such a bail-in before the equity capital of the Cantonal Bank.

Insolvency Proceedings

FINMA may order bankruptcy proceedings under Articles 33 et seq of the Banking Act, regardless of whether it first ordered protective measures under Article 26 of the Banking Act or bank reorganisation proceedings under Articles 28-32 thereof.

Article 34 para 1 of the Banking Act provides that bankruptcy proceedings ordered by FINMA have the same effect as the start of bankruptcy proceedings pursuant to Articles 197-220 of the Swiss Debt Enforcement and Bankruptcy Act (DEBA) and, according to Article 34 para 2 of the Banking Act, the bankruptcy proceedings are administered according to the rules of Articles 221-270 of the DEBA. However, this is subject to any rules departing from the DEBA in the Banking Act, and FINMA may deviate from the rules of the DEBA as it deems appropriate.

Swiss and foreign creditors are equally entitled to file their claims in Swiss insolvency proceedings, including creditors of foreign branches (Article 3 para 2 of the BIO-FINMA).

From a Swiss perspective, the principle of universality applies in respect of insolvency proceedings commenced in respect of a bank under Articles 33 et seq of the Banking Act. As a result, all assets owned by a bank at the time of the opening of insolvency proceedings against it form part of the bankruptcy estate, regardless of their physical location, provided that such assets are not exempted from bankruptcy proceedings (as would be the case for assets subject to sovereign immunity).

Based on the general rules of the DEBA, in bankruptcy proceedings a bank may no longer dispose of the assets of the bankruptcy estate – such dispositions would be void towards the creditors (Article 204 of the DEBA). For these purposes, the time specified by FINMA as the start of the bankruptcy proceedings is relevant. Moreover, claims forming part of the bankruptcy estate can no longer be validly discharged by payment to the debtor, but must be paid into the bankruptcy estate.

As regards liabilities, the opening of bankruptcy proceedings has the effect that all obligations of such bank become due against the bankruptcy estate, with the exception of those secured by mortgages on the bank’s real estate (Article 208 of the DEBA). Non-monetary claims will be converted into monetary claims of corresponding value (Article 211 of the DEBA).

Implementation of International Commitments

With the Swiss rules on reorganisation proceedings, Switzerland implemented the Financial Stability Board recommendations on effective resolution regimes. It also introduced a competence for FINMA to exercise resolution stay powers.

Under Article 30a of the Banking Act, and in connection with protective measures under Article 26 or reorganisation proceedings under Articles 28-32, FINMA has the power to order a temporary stay of:

  • any contractual termination right of a counterparty or the exercise of any rights of set-off;
  • the enforcement of collateral; or
  • the “porting” of derivatives transactions, in any case for up to two business days, if such contractual termination or other right would otherwise be triggered by such protective measures or reorganisation proceedings (Article 30a paras 1 to 3 of the Banking Act).

According to Article 12 para 2bis of the Banking Ordinance, when entering into new agreements or amending existing agreements, a bank licensed by FINMA must agree with the counterparty the application of the resolution stay powers of FINMA according to Article 30a of the Banking Act, provided that the agreement is subject to a law other than Swiss law or provides for the jurisdiction of courts other than Swiss courts, and provided that the agreement is included on a list of contracts in the scope of such obligation (Article 56 para 1 lit a to h of the BIO-FINMA), including derivatives transactions, repo transactions, intrabank credit agreements and master agreements in relation thereto.

Implementation of FinSA and FinIA

The remaining transition periods for the licensing obligations under FinIA (with regard to asset manager and trustees) will end on 30 December 2022. This marks the final step in the implementation of FinSA and FinIA.

LIBOR Transition

All LIBOR settings for UK sterling, Japanese yen, Swiss francs, and euros and the one-week and two-month settings for US dollar-LIBOR are no longer published or became non-representative, as applicable, on 31 December 2021. The other US dollar-LIBOR settings will cease to be published or become non-representative, as applicable, on 30 June 2023.

FINMA continues to closely follow international developments regarding the end of LIBOR.

For those transactions forming part of a trading book of legacy transactions with a term beyond the end of LIBOR, FINMA has recommended that participants in the derivatives market enter into transactions including the market-standard fallback clauses and adhere to the terms of the LIBOR Fallbacks Protocol published by ISDA or, as applicable, enter into bilateral agreements with the same effect (eg, on the basis of the documentation published by the Swiss Banking Association).

FINMA also clarified that an amendment of a transaction for the purposes of adjusting its terms in view of the LIBOR cessation does not qualify as having entered into a new transaction for the purposes of applying the regulatory requirements for uncleared derivatives under the FMIA, provided that the amendment is made in line with the market standard terms (see FINMA Guidance 02/2021 of 5 July 2021).

For the floating rate notes and the loan markets, the relevant documentation solutions in the respective markets must be taken into account.

Introduction of DLT Rights

Prior to the adoption of the DLT Act, Swiss securities law was a limiting factor in the issuance and trading of capital markets instruments in the form of digital assets issued on a distributed ledger (crypto-assets or tokens). Aiming to expand the potential use-cases of such DLT going forward and at the same time put the transactions on a robust legal basis, the Swiss Parliament adopted the DLT Act, which fully entered into force on 1 August 2021 together with the implementing secondary legislation and introduced the following:

  • without regulating or endorsing any particular technology, the DLT Act amends various existing laws in order to remove legal obstacles that hampered the development of a functioning market for tokens that are a digital representation of financial instruments. The most important innovation of the DLT Act is the introduction of “DLT rights” as a new type of right designed for digital assets;
  • a right to set-aside crypto-assets held by a custodian for clients; and
  • new licence categories for trading venues for DLT rights and foreign securities that are transferred on a distributed ledger.

DLT rights may become the digital equivalent of certificated securities or uncertificated securities by linking a right to a registration on a distributed ledger instead of a certificated security instrument or a registration in an uncertificated securities register. DLT rights may not be exercised or transferred outside of the relevant distributed ledger. Any rights that could be issued as certificated or uncertificated securities may be issued as DLT rights.

A next step would be to set up a regulated trading venue for secondary market trading activities in DLT rights, which integrates post-trading activities into the platform and may also be accessible to retail investors.

Revision of Bank Insolvency Rules

On 17 December 2021, the Swiss Federal Parliament passed an amendment to the Banking Act. The revision essentially anchors reorganisation and insolvency rules for banks and strengthens the position of Cantonal Banks that have sovereign guarantees. It will do the following in particular:

  • incorporate the rules regarding the waterfall of how rights, equity and debt instruments are bailed-in into the Banking Act (such rules are currently part of the BIO-FINMA);
  • introduce the power to carve out certain financial instruments issued by Cantonal Banks with a guarantee by the sovereign from the bail-in waterfall;
  • introduce a reform of the rules on the pay-out of proceeds in the depositor protection scheme; and
  • introduce an obligation for securities custodians to segregate their own positions from client positions.

Due to the revision of the Banking Act, the Banking Ordinance also needs to be amended. For this reason, the Federal Department of Finance (FDF) started a consultation on the amendment of the Banking Ordinance which ran until 15 July 2022. An alignment of the BIO-FINMA with the new rules is also pending.

The revised provisions of the Banking Act and the Ordinance are expected to enter into force in early 2023.

ESG Reporting Requirements

The largest banks and insurance companies (firms in supervisory categories 1 and 2) must already describe the significant climate-related financial risks tot heir business, their impact on the business and risk strategy and any effects on existing risk categories as part of their ongoing reporting according to Circulars 2016/1 “Disclosure – banks” and 2016/2 “Disclosure – insurers”. The revised circulars entered into force on 1 July 2021. In addition, these firms must disclose the risk management structures and processes for identifying, measuring and addressing these risks as well as relevant quantitative data, including a description of the methodology used. Furthermore, they have to describe the main features of their governance structure in relation to climate-related financial risks. Information about the criteria and methods used to evaluate the materiality of risks must also be disclosed (please see the FINMA evaluation of these reports in the FINMA supervisory guidance 03/2022).

Climate Reporting Ordinance

As of January 2024, the ordinance on climate reporting (Climate Reporting Ordinance) will apply in Switzerland and implement certain reporting obligations on environmental matters more widely. This implements reporting obligations on non-financial matters according to Article 964b of the Swiss Code of Obligations of 30 March 2011 (CO).

The Climate Reporting Ordinance is intended to improve sustainability in the financial sector (sustainable finance) and strengthen the position of the Swiss financial market with respect to sustainable financial services. From a financial market regulatory perspective, transparency regarding environmental criteria is considered an important measure for the implementation of sustainable finance.

The purpose of the Climate Reporting Ordinance is to create reliable and comparable data on climate considerations and climate targets through the binding implementation of the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) established by the Financial Stability Board in 2015, so that these can be taken into account in investment advice, balance sheets of investors and the financial system generally. Provided that a company complies with the requirements under Article 3 of the Climate Reporting Ordinance, it is presumed that the company has fulfilled its obligation to report on environmental matters under Article 964b paragraph 1 of the CO. Otherwise, the company must demonstrate – in the sense of “comply or explain” – how it has fulfilled this obligation in other ways or why the company does not pursue a concept for climate reporting.

Climate matters include – in the sense of the principle of “double materiality” – both the impact of the climate on companies and the impact of the company's activities on the climate.

The obligations under the Climate Reporting Ordinance shall apply to Swiss companies which cumulatively fulfil the following criteria:

  • companies of public interest as defined in Article 2 litera c of the Audit Oversight Act of 16 December 2005 – ie, listed companies pursuant to Article 727 paragraph 1 No 1 of the CO or companies which require authorisation, recognition or registration by a financial market supervisory authority under a financial market law pursuant to Article 3 of FINMASA (eg, banks, securities firms, insurance companies, fund management companies, asset managers or financial market infrastructures);
  • which, together with their controlled domestic or foreign undertakings, have an annual average of at least 500 full-time equivalent positions in two consecutive financial years; and
  • which, together with their controlled domestic or foreign undertakings, have reached a balance sheet total of at least CHF20 million or a turnover of CHF40 million for two consecutive financial years.

However, the Climate Reporting Ordinance is not applicable to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).

Swiss Approach to Regulation of Greenwashing

Whilst the Climate Reporting Ordinance applies to financial institutions and companies within its scope, it does not currently contain any definitions of climate impact or sustainability indicators, which create transparency in relation to all financial products and thus minimise the risk of greenwashing on a product level.

FINMA provided information on its expectations regarding the current practice in the management of sustainability-related collective investment schemes at fund and institution level on preventing and combating greenwashing in its supervisory guidance 05/2021 dated 3 November 2021 (FINMA supervisory guidance 05/2021) and warned financial service providers who offer sustainability-related financial products of potential greenwashing risks in the advisory process. However, FINMA also concluded that its powers to intervene with respect to greenwashing are currently limited.

However, it should be noted that even without specific provisions on greenwashing, generally applicable legal requirements must be complied with which are intended to prevent the deception and misleading of clients. For instance, Article 12 paragraph 1 of the Collective Investment Schemes Act of 23 June 2006 sets out that the designation of collective investment schemes must not give rise to confusion or deception. Also, the Federal Act against Unfair Competition prohibits deceptive conduct or conduct that violates the principle of good faith.

Principles of the Swiss Bankers Association

On a financial services level, the Swiss Bankers Association (SBA) has implemented self-regulation for member institutions addressing ESG criteria for investment advisory and portfolio management relationships in June 2022.

From January 2023, the guidelines for the financial service providers on the integration of ESG preferences and ESG risks into investment advice and portfolio management (the SBA ESG Guidelines) will apply to members of the SBA. The SBA ESG Guidelines are intended to implement minimal standards for the consideration of ESG preferences and  risks in investment advice and portfolio management and to prevent greenwashing (Article 1). The SBA ESG Guidelines replace the Guideline for the integration of ESG considerations into the advisory process for private clients from June 2020. Non-members may implement the SBA ESG Guidelines on a voluntary basis and register themselves on a list maintained by the SBA.

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Bär & Karrer Ltd is a well-known Swiss law firm with more than 200 lawyers located in Zurich, Geneva, Lugano, Zug and Basel. The firm's core business is advising clients on innovative and complex transactions and representing them in litigation, arbitration and regulatory proceedings. The firm's clients include multinational corporations as well as individuals in Switzerland and around the world. The majority of the firm's work is international in nature and its extensive network is made up of correspondent law firms that are market leaders in their respective jurisdictions. There is a broad range of experience in handling cross-border transactions and proceedings within the team.

Asset Managers and Trustees under the New FinIA Supervisory Regime

The Swiss Parliament adopted, along with new financial services legislation, the Financial Institutions Act (FinIA) in June 2018 in order to enhance Switzerland's competitiveness in wealth management and to level the playing field for financial institutions. In force since January 2020, FinIA has introduced a new licensing regime for asset managers and trustees. In the new regime, regulated asset managers and trustees are required to be affiliated with a supervisory organisation (SO) that is itself licensed by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA). Although the SO will oversee the regulated asset managers and trustees on a day-to-day basis, FINMA is the chief supervisory authority and has the authority to take any necessary regulatory actions towards these regulated entities and each SO at any time.

Active asset managers and trustees – other than banks, securities firms and collective asset managers, which were already regulated by the FINMA before 2020 – had a six-month period following the implementation of the FinIA to inform FINMA of their intention to continue operating under the new supervision regime. Consequently, asset managers and trustees were eligible to seek affiliation with an SO licensed by FINMA if they had reported to the FINMA by 30 June 2020 and to submit a licensing application to the latter until the end of a statutory transition period that ends on 31 December 2022. It is permissible for such asset managers and trustees to continue their activities until a decision is made concerning their application.

The purpose of this article is to define the scope of the new licensing requirements set out in the FinIA, outline these requirements and the authorisation process, and provide an overview of the current situation and the consequences faced by active asset managers and trustees who do not apply for a licence by the applicable deadline (31 December 2022).

Asset managers and trustees subject to an authorisation

Under the FinIA, asset managers are defined as persons or entities acting on a commercial basis who are empowered on the basis of a mandate to professionally dispose of assets in the name – and on behalf – of clients. The definition encompasses all types of asset managers, not only those who have discretionary mandates (ie, those who acquire, dispose, or manage financial instruments), but also investment advisers who are able to execute transactions on behalf of their clients. While the issuance of personalised recommendations concerning transactions in financial instruments is also covered by the above definition, the management of other assets, such as direct investments in real estate or art collections, is not.

A trustee is defined as a person or entity acting on a commercial basis who, by virtue of an instrument creating a trust under the Hague Convention of 1 July 1985 on the Law Applicable to Trusts and their recognition, professionally manages – or is able to dispose of – assets for the benefit of the beneficiaries or for a specific purpose based on the instrument. This definition does not include protectors – unless they have the power to dispose over the trust's assets – nor directors or officers of companies held by a trust.

Irrespective of their legal form, asset managers and trustees as defined above who operate in or from Switzerland, including Swiss branches and representative offices of foreign asset managers and trustees, qualify as financial institutions according to FinIA and require a FINMA authorisation.

General authorisation conditions

As a reminder, in order to obtain – and maintain – a FINMA authorisation, asset managers and trustees must fulfil the following requirements:

  • be affiliated with an SO licensed by FINMA (Article 7(2) FinIA);
  • satisfy, together with its directors and senior management, the fit and proper requirement and ensure an irreproachable conduct of business (Articles 11(1) and (2) FinIA);
  • ensure that their qualified shareholders, being shareholders holding more than 10% of the capital or the votes, have good reputation and do not exercise their influence at the expense of prudent and reliable management (Articles 11(3) and (4) FinIA);
  • have a management body comprising at least two persons who are duly qualified for their task (one person may suffice, pursuant to Article 20 FinIA, if the FINMA has received proof that business continuity is warranted);
  • maintain an appropriate internal organisation, including a suitable risk management system and an effective internal control structure to ensure compliance with legal and internal provisions (Articles 9 and 21 FinIA);
  • be effectively managed from Switzerland, provided that entities that are part of a financial group subject to appropriate consolidated supervision may apply the general guidelines and decisions of the group in connection with the consolidated oversight (Article 10(1) FinIA);
  • dispose of a fully paid-in share capital of CHF100,000, plus adequate guarantee or professional liability insurance coverage (Article 22 FinIA); and
  • dispose of an appropriate level of regulatory capital. In order to limit the compliance burden, the regulatory capital requirements for asset managers and trustees are set at a quarter of the fixed costs as reported in the last annual financial statements, up to a maximum of CHF 10 million (Article 23 FinIA). Insofar as it covers the risks inherent in the business model, the net professional indemnity insurance may be used as regulatory capital up to 50% of the required capital amount (Articles 22(2) and 23 FinIA; Article 31 FinIO).

Authorisation process and supervisory regime

Asset managers and trustees interested in applying for a licence must register (together with an authorisation coordinator) on FINMA's survey and application web platform (EHP).

Upon completion of such registration, which can take up to two weeks, asset managers and trustees can prepare their application files and apply for affiliation with one of the SOs. As of December 2022, the following institutions had been licensed as OS by the FINMA.

  • AOOS - Schweizerische Aktiengesellschaft für Aufsicht, in Zurich.
  • FINcontrol Suisse AG, in Zug.
  • Organisme de surveillance des instituts financiers OSIF, in Geneva.
  • Supervisory Organisation for Financial Intermediaries & Trustees SOFIT, in Geneva.
  • OSFIN Organisation de surveillance financière, in Neuchâtel.

Affiliation with an SO is a mandatory preliminary step for an asset manager or a trustee to apply for a FINMA licence. To obtain such affiliation, asset managers and trustees are required to provide the relevant SO with a complete FINMA application file and remain available for any adjustment or improvement.

As mentioned above, Swiss asset managers and trustees who started their activities before the coming into force of FinIA (on 1 January 2020) must file a licensing application with the FINMA before 31 December 2022 in order to remain eligible to continue their activity on a commercial and professional basis beyond that date (see Article 19 FinIO). This deadline applies to the filing of applications with the FINMA. Although there is no specific deadline for the affiliation with an SO, considering that the affiliation with an SO is a prerequisite to the filing of the licensing application, FINMA recommended that asset managers and trustees seek their affiliation at the latest by 30 June 2022 in order to allow for sufficient time to make any adjustment or improvement to their application and obtain their affiliation with an SO, before submitting their application to FINMA prior to the end of the transitional period on 31 December 2022.

Risk-based authorisation approach

FINMA handles licensing requests based on risk: while applications submitted by simple business models may be handled in a standardised manner, those submitted by asset managers who have more complex and risk-bearing models may be dealt with more rigorously.

For instance, pursuant to Article 26(2) FinIO, asset managers and trustees with more than five full-time work positions or an annual gross income of more than CHF2 million must have an independent (of revenue-based activities) risk management in place to qualify for an authorisation, unless they do not have high risks in their business model.

FINMA may also require that asset managers or trustees that have ten or more full-time work positions or annual gross earnings higher than CHF5 million appoint an independent body responsible for governance, supervision and control (equivalent to a board of directors in a company limited by shares), if the nature and scope of the company's activities so demand (Article 23(2) FinIO). The independence criterion is met if the majority of the members of that body are not part of the company's management.

Asset managers and trustees must set out guidelines for the basic principles of risk management and define their risk tolerance according to their activity and structure. Asset managers and trustees can entrust their risk management to a qualified external entity.

According to FINMA, a business model is deemed high-risk – regardless of the asset manager's annual gross income threshold – in particular in case of:

  • management of retirement benefit institutions' assets that do not exceed the minimis threshold;
  • use of foreign custodian banks, because of risks of money laundering (in particular money originating from tax fraud), non-equivalent prudential supervision and shell banks;
  • heterogeneous foreign client structure (from many different countries) or client structure focused on a specific foreign region (especially when such region entails a significant money laundering risk);
  • use of financial instruments with potential conflicts of interest: risk due to lack of information to clients with regard to potential conflicts of interest arising from the use of their own investment instruments (eg, funds, actively managed certificates) in the context of asset management, advice or structuring; risk due to lack of transparency with regard to so-called "double dipping" of fees; and risk of fraud;
  • unlimited power of attorney granted to the asset manager by certain clients (as opposed to powers of attorney limited to portfolio management, which exclude the right to withdraw or transfer assets except for investment in other financial instruments);
  • large volume of assets under management (AuM > CHF1 billion); and
  • receipt of inducements from third parties (eg, retrocessions), which involves civil and criminal law risks if the clients are not comprehensively informed on such inducement and have not waived any right to claim for the transfer of such inducement to the client's benefit.

According to FINMA, some of the general measures which contribute to managing and reducing the above listed risks are as follows:

  • the adoption by the manager of internal guidelines and regulations which define and take into due consideration the risks associated with the involvement of foreign custodian banks, cross-border financial services and inducements and provide for adequate measures with regard to prevention and transparency of conflicts of interest;
  • segregation of the risk and compliance functions from the operational units; and
  • the presence of client advisors with appropriate experience and professional qualifications and continuous education and training.

Overview of the current situation

In its guidance published on 11 August 2022, FINMA indicated it had received 689 complete licence applications as of 31 July 2022. Of these, 365 asset managers and 11 trustees had been granted authorisations, while the remaining 313 applications were still being reviewed by FINMA. The authorised SOs informed FINMA that they had received 765 applications by 30 June 2022, which indicated that most asset managers and trustees adhered to FINMA's recommended deadline for submitting affiliation requests to SOs of their choice. According to FINMA, the costs and the time needed to process an application depend on the quality and complexity of the application. The average processing time for an application is 108 days (which includes the time required by institutions to make necessary adjustments or improvements) and the average licensing (administrative) fee was CHF5,674.

In light of the fact that 1,535 institutions submitted their applications by the deadline and are presently undergoing the licensing process – or have already obtained their licences – and that 661 other institutions have already informed FINMA that they will not be submitting licence applications, approximately 400 institutions had not yet submitted affiliation applications – or a licence application – by 31 July 2022. The institutions that had reported to the FINMA in the first semester of 2020 but will not submit an application before the end of 2022 have to cease operations by that date, unless they merge into another institution that has duly applied for the licence or transfer their clients to such an institution.

Once the affiliation confirmation by an authorised SO is obtained and the licence application filed with FINMA within the deadline of 31 December 2022, asset managers and trustees may continue their activities beyond the transitional period until FINMA has made its decision. Those who have not filed an application by 31 December 2022 and continue their activities within the same structure might be considered in breach of FinIA as from 1 January 2023.

Forecasts for 2023

FINMA, in its guidance published on 4 May 2022 and 11 August 2022, stated that asset managers and trustees should take the necessary steps in time to affiliate with an SO and apply for a licence with FINMA.

Further, it also called on asset managers and trustees who have not yet applied for authorisation to do so immediately and reminded them that if they miss the deadline, they will not be eligible for a possible deadline extension under Article 74(4) of the FinIA.

Finally, asset managers and trustees who did not intend to submit a licence application because they intended to cease their activity or because they were – or, by 1 January 2023, would be – no longer engaged in an activity requiring a licence were being asked to inform FINMA in writing of their decision stating their reasons.

FINMA has already opened investigations and warned latecomers that, if they continue to operate on a professional basis – intentionally or negligently – without having duly submitted an application by 31 December 2022, FINMA will take supervisory measures (by placing such institutions on its public warning list) and will file a criminal complaint with the Federal Department of Finance.

Conclusion

To conclude, while it is true that new regulations in the financial sector have certainly altered the practice of asset managers and trustees by requiring them to comply with new regulations, FINMA has assisted and guided such institutions in achieving authorisation, particularly by means of its communications on the subject. The length of processing time and the cost of the authorisation procedure are reasonable and depend largely on the quality of the applications and the cooperation of the institutions.

However, it seems that, despite an ample transitional period, the majority of asset managers and trustees have waited until the last few months before the deadline to file their licensing applications with FINMA.

Therefore, it is not surprising to see from FINMA's communications that it will be quite strict with institutions that fail to comply with requirements within the deadline, which may result in a hard time or even a liquidation proceeding.

Bär & Karrer Ltd

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frederic.betrisey@baerkarrer.ch www.baerkarrer.ch
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Law and Practice

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Schellenberg Wittmer Ltd has a banking and finance group in Zurich and Geneva comprised of more than 20 Swiss lawyers with in-depth understanding of the regulatory environment of all types of financial institutions and the domestic and international financial markets. Many of the practice lawyers have gained in-house experience while working for banks, asset managers, regulators and international law firms. The firm’s experience and expertise, together with the size of the team, enables it to provide top-quality and tailor-made advice on finance transactions and regulatory issues of every type. The team regularly acts on behalf of Swiss and foreign banks and other financial institutions, such as investment firms, insurance companies, fund management companies and asset managers, across a broad range of regulatory matters, including the establishment and licensing of financial institutions in Switzerland, the regulation of financial services and other activities subject to prudential supervision or regulation, the structuring of capital transactions for banks, M&A of financial institutions, and audit mandates granted by FINMA for investigations in financial institutions.

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Bär & Karrer Ltd is a well-known Swiss law firm with more than 200 lawyers located in Zurich, Geneva, Lugano, Zug and Basel. The firm's core business is advising clients on innovative and complex transactions and representing them in litigation, arbitration and regulatory proceedings. The firm's clients include multinational corporations as well as individuals in Switzerland and around the world. The majority of the firm's work is international in nature and its extensive network is made up of correspondent law firms that are market leaders in their respective jurisdictions. There is a broad range of experience in handling cross-border transactions and proceedings within the team.

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