DUBAI, Jan 23 (Reuters) – Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund has elevated its stake in Credit score Suisse (CSGN.S) to only beneath 7%, changing into the Swiss financial institution’s second-largest shareholder after Saudi Nationwide Financial institution, in an indication that its Gulf investor base is rising in significance.
The Qatar Funding Authority (QIA) purchased 139.03 million shares within the Swiss lender, Refinitiv knowledge exhibits based mostly on a submitting on Friday with the Securities and Alternate Fee which quoted its most up-to-date possession holding as of December 31, 2022.
The brand new shares convey the QIA’s possession in Credit score Suisse to six.87%, amounting to 272.25 million shares, from 5.57% as reported in its final SEC submitting in November.
Credit score Suisse declined to remark when contacted by Reuters on Monday and the QIA didn’t instantly reply to a request for remark.
Credit score Suisse’s shares rose 2.2% on Monday to shut at 3.15 Swiss francs.
U.S. funding agency Harris Associates, considered one of Credit score Suisse’s largest shareholders, shed its holding to about 5%, based on regulatory filings on January 11from a stake of about 10% within the financial institution final August.
Saudi Nationwide Financial institution (1180.SE) owns a stake value about 10% within the Swiss lender financial institution after it turned an anchor investor in Credit score Suisse’s $4.3 billion capital elevate which started in October to fund the financial institution’s revamp and restructuring. Saudi Arabian conglomerate Olayan Group owns a stake of about 3%, Eikon knowledge exhibits. SNB, together with the QIA and Olayan Group, account for about 20% of Credit score Suisse shares.
Credit score Suisse outlined plans in October to lift 4 billion Swiss francs from buyers, reduce hundreds of jobs and shift its focus from funding banking in direction of its wealthy purchasers.
The announcement adopted a troublesome few weeks when the one-time revered Swiss establishment had even grow to be a ‘meme inventory’ on the centre of a social media storm.
As soon as a logo for Swiss reliability, the financial institution’s fame has been tarnished by a collection of scandals, together with an unprecedented prosecution at house involving laundering cash for a felony gang.
In 2021, the financial institution took a $5.5 billion loss from the unravelling of U.S. funding agency Archegos and needed to freeze $10 billion value of provide chain finance funds linked to bancrupt British financier Greensill, highlighting risk-management failings.
Reporting by Hadeel Al Sayegh in Dubai, Oliver Hirt in Zurich and Andrew Mills in Doha
Modifying by Nick Zieminski
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