After four years of talks, a deal defining Switzerland's
relationship with the EU remains in limbo, with concerns about
preserving Swiss sovereignty holding up a resolution to the
country's biggest foreign policy issue.
Geneva Financial Center, representing 104 banks, said that
reviving the stalled treaty was a "necessary precondition for
negotiations on a future agreement that would give Swiss banks
and financial intermediaries free access to EU markets".
"Failing that, they will be forced either to relocate or to
develop some of their activities in the EU, adversely impacting
jobs and tax revenues in Switzerland at both national and local
level," Yves Mirabaud, president of the group and chairman of
Mirabaud & Cie SA, told a news conference.
Brussels has said the Swiss will get no increased access to the
single market until the treaty, which would see Switzerland
routinely adopt single market rules, is settled.
The Center urged the Swiss government to send a "strong signal"
backing a deal after the parliamentary election on Oct. 20.
Asked whether he feared banks might leave if there were no deal,
Mirabaud said: "What I fear is not that they leave the financial
center, but that they pursue their growth outside of Switzerland
- in particular as we've seen in Luxembourg or other European
centers."
The banking sector employs 35,600 people in Geneva and
contributes 12% of the canton's economy, according to the group.
Nearly half of the assets managed in Switzerland, still the
world's largest financial center for cross-border private wealth
management, come from abroad, including some 1 trillion Swiss
francs ($1.01 trillion) from the EU, it said.
Edouard Cuendet, the Center's managing director, said
Switzerland was "still number one" in cross-border management,
though he said market share had dipped since the automatic
exchange of client information with tax authorities came into
force.
"Most establishments expect next year to be more difficult than
2019," Cuendet said, citing uncertainty and pressure on margins.
Geneva bankers are also "on edge with regard to the risks
generated by negative rates, which look to be here to stay,"
Mirabaud said.
The Swiss National Bank's (SNB) negative interest rates were
driving investors to "over-allocate" to certain asset classes
such as real estate and have also hit pension funds, he added.
(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Jan Harvey)
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