CS exec: I’m not giving my paycheck back

CS exec: I’m not giving my paycheck back

Tue, Mar 28th 2023

Former Credit Suisse chairman Urs Rohner says he will not be returning any of the CHF52 million he earned while working at the failed bank.
Urs Rohner, former Credit Suisse chairman, says he will not be returning any of his earned CHF52 million (Keystone SDA).

Amidst a government investigation into who is at fault for Credit Suisse’s demise before it was purchased by UBS, former CS chairman Urs Rohner announced that he has no intention of giving back any of the millions of Swiss francs he earned while at the helm.

Not going down with the ship

Rohner, 63, served on Credit Suisse’s board of directors for 12 years, first as vice president for two years and then as president for 10. He served as president from 2011 and stepped down in 2021. During those combined 12 years he earned CHF52 million as a salary, according to Ethos Foundation, a Swiss shareholder investment group.

Rohner does not intend to pay back any of those millions he said using a spokesperson to relay the message to local news outlet 20 Minuten.

“As Chairman of the Board of Directors, he didn’t get any bonuses, so there’s nothing to repay,” the spokesperson said. They added that Rohner volunteered to waive his CHF5 million in bonuses that was due at the end of his contract. He received most of his salary in cash as opposed to in shares like many of his colleagues, according to the outlet.

While Swiss financial regulator FINMA investigates Credit Suisse, the government has ordered a freeze to be put on bank bonuses.

During his tenure, Rohner oversaw millions lost in international lawsuits, billions lost in bad investments, employee scandals and plummeting stock prices. Rohner says he is wary to appear in public today as he currently feels “socially ostracized.”

The headquarters of Credit Suisse, right, and UBS, left, at Paradeplatz in Zurich (Keystone SDA).
Tidjane Thiam: I left the bank in good condition

Credit Suisse’s CEO from 2015 to 2020, Tidjane Thiam, wrote an editorial in the Financial Times defending his record at Credit Suisse.

“Since I left the bank in February 2020, I have mostly refrained from commenting on Credit Suisse, but the turn of events now compels me to speak,” Thiam writes. “When I stepped down as the chief executive of Credit Suisse, it had just posted its highest profits for 10 years after a deep restructuring.”

“Credit Suisse was making nearly as much profit as its new owner UBS” before Thiam left, he writes; adding “Its current plight saddens me.”

While Credit Suisse may have been faring better financially in 2020, Thiam left amidst a FINMA investigation into a corporate espionage case that he was at the center of; a case that revealed “serious organizational shortcomings” at the bank.

The spying scandal began at a New Year’s Eve party held at Thiam’s home in a wealthy Zürich suburb. One of the guests, the bank’s then-wealth management chief Iqbal Khan, remarked on Thiam’s garden, which “set off a bitter feud between the two alpha males.”

The feud was never resolved and Khan left Credit Suisse seven months later for a position at its rival bank, UBS. At some point around Khan’s departure, Thiam and others at Credit Suisse allegedly began spying on Khan to, they say, prevent him from poaching private bankers to UBS.

Khan reported to authorities that he believed he was being spied on after three men chased him and his wife through the streets of Zürich by car and on foot. An investigation ensued that appeared to clear Thiam’s name, but the soap opera of events ended in him stepping down from his CEO position. Moreover, Thiam’s top lieutenant and the bank’s head of security were fired; and, a consultant involved with the espionage took his own life.

The saga that is and was Credit Suisse continues.

This article may be freely shared and re-printed, provided that it prominently links back to the original article.

Related Stories

Swiss FDI Spikes: As Foreign Investment Slows In Germany
Thumbnail

Amid a general decline in European foreign investments, Switzerland excels with over 50% increase in projects and a...

Is Swiss Labour Day Here To Stay? May 1st
Thumbnail

Intense debate in Switzerland as Young Finns seek to cancel May 1st holiday, while Syna pushes for national recognition...

Swiss Inflation Rises in April
Thumbnail

Swiss inflation reaches 1.4% in April, up from 1.0% in March, catching economists off-guard and signaling higher...

Fire Burns Commercial & Residential Property In Valais
Thumbnail

Vionnaz fire: Building housing stores and apartments destroyed, emergency teams and detours in place on cantonal road....

New Training Access for Rejected Asylum Seekers
Thumbnail

Starting June 1, rejected asylum seekers and undocumented migrants in Switzerland need only two years of compulsory...

Record Number of Organ Donations and Transplants in Switzerland
Thumbnail

Switzerland recorded the highest number of organ donations from deceased individuals and transplants....

Credit Suisse CEO To Step Down As UBS Merger Accelerates
Thumbnail

UBS plans to dissolve Credit Suisse's management in the coming weeks, with CEO Ulrich Körner leaving post-merger,...

Stay in Touch

Noteworthy

the swiss times
A production of UltraSwiss AG, 6340 Baar, Switzerland
Copyright © 2024 UltraSwiss AG 2024 All rights reserved