FINMA, had said earlier this month that it was
investigating the role of the private bank, in distributing
securities and financial products to the wider Espirito Santo
group.
The Lausanne-based bank is owned by Espirito Santo Financial
Group (ESFG), which has been under creditor protection since
late July after it buckled under massive debts linked to its
founding family.
"Recapitalising the bank through participation of the current
shareholders is not possible, as the parent companies of the
Espirito Santo Group are also insolvent," the regulator said in
a statement. "FINMA has thus initiated bankruptcy proceedings
against the bank and appointed a bankruptcy liquidator."
BPES officials were not immediately available for comment.
ESFG was also the biggest shareholder in Banco Espirito Santo (BES),
once Portugal's largest listed bank, which had to be rescued by
the state on Aug. 4 in a 4.9 billion-euro(6.31 billion US
dollar) bailout.
FINMA said the private bank is in a position to rapidly and
fully reimburse privileged deposits of up to 100,000 Swiss
francs ($106,689) to its clients, according to current
estimates.
(Reporting by Joshua Franklin and Katharina Bart in Zurich and
Andrei Khalip in Lisbon; Editing by Greg Mahlich)
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