Credit Suisse rescue deal entails $280-billion support
UBS said it will pay $3.2 billion for the 167-year-old flagship, while the government said UBS would also take on the first $5.4 billion in losses from unwinding derivatives and other risky assets.

UBS said it will pay $3.2 billion for the 167-year-old flagship, while the government said UBS would also take on the first $5.4 billion in losses from unwinding derivatives and other risky assets.
The deal, however, involves a large amount of public support, with three tranches of liquidity and loans, as well as a pledge from the Swiss government to absorb up to 9 billion francs in potential losses from the takeover.
The total of 259 billion francs of support is equivalent to a third of Switzerland's entire economic output, which stood at 771 billion francs last year. Credit Suisse on Monday saw its shares close 55.74% lower at 0.82 Swiss francs a piece, slightly above the UBS purchase price.

“The government’s going to have to tell voters why they are putting citizens’ money, taxpayer money at risk to bail out a bank that was predominantly servicing the ultra wealthy, doing some pretty extraordinary things with its investment bank and paying people crazy amounts of money relative to what the man in the street gets paid,” said one former global bank chief executive, who did not wish to be identified.
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