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Fassbind said Credit Suisse hasn't been notified of any investigation against it by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in connection with the sale of complex mortgage-related securities known as collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs. The SEC filed a complaint against Goldman Sachs Group Inc. on Friday alleging the bank marketed CDOs to investors without telling them the pools were picked by a hedge fund that was betting on them to fail. Questions have been raised about other banks' involvement in the CDO market, but Fassbind said for Credit Suisse "this is not a business that had a meaningful size." Meanwhile the prospect that Credit Suisse could become the target of foreign tax investigators grew more likely. So far UBS has borne the brunt of recent tax evasion investigations over its cross-border business dealing with wealthy U.S. clients.
Fassbind said it now appeared increasingly likely that some of Credit Suisse's clients are listed on a disk containing stolen data purchased earlier this year by German authorities investigating alleged tax cheats. "We still have no concrete evidence about this case in the format of an official statement," he said. Switzerland agreed to soften its strict banking secrecy laws last year after coming under heavy pressure from the United States, Germany and France because of the way it protected bank client information from foreign tax investigators.
[Associated
Press;
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