mercredi 18 mars 2015
Scenes From the Shadowy World of Swiss Banking
Posted on 22:51 by nice news
The Swiss banking industry is a $7 trillion secret.
It holds a third of the worlds offshore assets, including, say critics, the cash of dictators, despots, gangsters, and arms dealersall protected by Switzerlands strict banking secrecy laws.
UBS and Credit Suisse, which together account for half of the Swiss banking industry, have neighboring headquarters on Zurichs Paradeplatzone of the most expensive pieces of real estate in Switzerland. Theyre said to own vast vaults beneath the square, containing gold, cash, and enough secrets to feed a myriad of spy novels and thrillers.
But the attitude toward what was once a source of national pride is shifting, fueled by politicians and even shareholders disenchanted with the apparent arrogance, incompetence, and venality exposed by huge losses, scandals, and galling bonus payments at the banks. UBS Chief Executive Officer Oswald Grübel resigned in 2011 after a rogue trader in London lost more than $2 billion, while in 2014, Credit Suisse pleaded guilty to helping Americans evade taxes and agreed to pay $2.6 billion. Meanwhile, smaller private banking outfits have banned their employees from traveling to the U.S. for fear of arrest.
Some Swiss call a clampdown on the banks an "economic war," but there are widespread calls for greater supervision and tighter regulation. Even the hallowed banking secrecy law itself is under threat after the Swiss government agreed to hand over the names of 4,450 Americans with accounts at UBS after the bank was caught red-handed using secret codes and encrypted computers to help them dodge taxes.
It holds a third of the worlds offshore assets, including, say critics, the cash of dictators, despots, gangsters, and arms dealersall protected by Switzerlands strict banking secrecy laws.
UBS and Credit Suisse, which together account for half of the Swiss banking industry, have neighboring headquarters on Zurichs Paradeplatzone of the most expensive pieces of real estate in Switzerland. Theyre said to own vast vaults beneath the square, containing gold, cash, and enough secrets to feed a myriad of spy novels and thrillers.
But the attitude toward what was once a source of national pride is shifting, fueled by politicians and even shareholders disenchanted with the apparent arrogance, incompetence, and venality exposed by huge losses, scandals, and galling bonus payments at the banks. UBS Chief Executive Officer Oswald Grübel resigned in 2011 after a rogue trader in London lost more than $2 billion, while in 2014, Credit Suisse pleaded guilty to helping Americans evade taxes and agreed to pay $2.6 billion. Meanwhile, smaller private banking outfits have banned their employees from traveling to the U.S. for fear of arrest.
Some Swiss call a clampdown on the banks an "economic war," but there are widespread calls for greater supervision and tighter regulation. Even the hallowed banking secrecy law itself is under threat after the Swiss government agreed to hand over the names of 4,450 Americans with accounts at UBS after the bank was caught red-handed using secret codes and encrypted computers to help them dodge taxes.
Scenes From the Shadowy World of Swiss Banking
Categories: Scenes From the Shadowy World of Swiss Banking
Inscription à :
Publier les commentaires (Atom)
0 commentaires:
Enregistrer un commentaire