Exclusive-Credit Suisse overhaul draws scrutiny from some investors,
proxy adviser over governance
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[November 11, 2022] By
Pamela Barbaglia, Oliver Hirt and Michael Shields
LONDON/ZURICH (Reuters) - Credit Suisse's
recent decision to exit certain investment banking activities is drawing
scrutiny from at least two investors and a proxy adviser who told
Reuters they are worried about how the Swiss bank managed potential
conflicts of interest of two directors.
The move to break up the lender and spin off the investment banking
business was seen by analysts as a way for Credit Suisse to focus on its
more profitable wealth management franchise. But the investors are
questioning how some of the decisions were taken.
Board member Michael Klein had begun working on the turnaround with
Chairman Axel Lehmann and other Credit Suisse officials in early
February, according to a person familiar with the situation.
In late October, Klein stepped down from the board to work on the
division that will be spun off and rebranded CS First Boston. He is set
to become CEO of the unit in 2023, pending regulatory approvals. The
company will be a preferred long-term partner for Credit Suisse, the
bank has said.
Ethos Foundation, which represents Swiss pension funds that own more
than 3% of Credit Suisse, told Reuters the bank needs to show it
conducted a thorough search when it picked board member Klein to run the
investment bank unit.
"We wonder whether the board conducted an adequate recruiting process"
for the investment bank chief, Ethos CEO Vincent Kaufmann said by email
on Monday.
In addition, Roger Said of proxy adviser Actares, which works for
individual investors including Credit Suisse shareholders, told Reuters
there is the risk that both Klein and Blythe Masters, another bank board
member who also advised on the reorganization, "could profit at Credit
Suisse's expense."
Klein recused himself from board discussions and voting after he was
informally offered the CEO job on Oct. 21, just six days before the
reorganization was announced, said the source familiar with the
situation.
Credit Suisse declined to comment beyond Lehmann's remarks Oct. 27 when
the bank unveiled the restructuring. "It goes without saying (we are)
very, very mindful of conflict of interest," Lehmann said then in
relation to both Klein and Masters.
Since 2021, Masters has also served as a consultant to Apollo, the U.S.
buyout fund which Credit Suisse picked as the preferred buyer of one of
the bank's trading businesses. Apollo has invested in Motive, a
New-York-based investment company founded by Masters.
Spokespeople for Klein, Masters and Apollo declined to comment.
At issue is whether Klein and Masters – both members of the board's
committee on the bank's strategic overhaul – may have influenced the
decisions to favour their own interests.
"In both cases, there is the possibility of conflicts of interest,"
Actares managing director Said told Reuters by email.
"The bank must show how it deals with this risk and communicate
transparently," even if the two board members have abstained from voting
on the reorganization, he said.
In Lehmann's October remarks, he said the two directors "needed to
abstain from any voting and were only allowed to potentially contribute
from a more technical perspective, so helping to create the fact base
for a decision making. This is all very well documented."
Tapping the expertise of internal talent is not unusual among companies
in Europe, according to Luca Enriques, a professor of corporate law at
the University of Oxford. Companies in Europe tend to accept that the
board may benefit from having a conflicted director participate in the
discussion, Enriques said.
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The logo of Swiss bank Credit Suisse is
seen at an office building in Zurich, Switzerland September 2, 2022.
REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann/File Photo
AT ARM'S LENGTH
Battered by a series of scandals and mounting losses, Credit Suisse
last month embarked on a turnaround plan that will see the bank
raise 4 billion Swiss francs ($4.16 billion) of capital from
investors and cut thousands of jobs.
The investment bank spin-off and the sale of the securitized
products unit to Apollo are key planks of the reorganization.
During the annual board offsite at Bad Ragaz, Switzerland, in June
the plan was discussed and gained the backing of the board and
management, the source said.
Klein, a 59-year-old former Citigroup rainmaker who runs advisory
boutique M. Klein & Co, has been a Credit Suisse board member since
2018. Over the years he became the go-to adviser to Saudi Arabia
using his own boutique to help the country's sovereign wealth fund
craft deals to diversify the kingdom's economy away from oil and
gas.
To help finance its turnaround, Credit Suisse will raise money from
Saudi National Bank (SNB), part owned by the kingdom, which is
investing 1.5 billion Swiss francs. SNB may also invest directly in
CS First Boston, the Saudi bank has said.
Klein and Credit Suisse also have discussed combining M. Klein & Co
into CS First Boston, according to one source familiar with the
discussions.
Andreas Thomae, corporate governance specialist at Germany's Deka
Investment, which manages around 360 billion euros ($369.5 billion)
in assets and owns a small stake in Credit Suisse, said Klein
running CS First Boston and the prospect of Klein bringing his own
boutique into CS First Boston "rings alarm bells."
"There is a massive conflict of interest. In our view, this is a
violation of corporate governance principles," Thomae said.
A senior official familiar with the matter said any transaction for
CS First Boston to absorb Klein's boutique would be carried out at
arm's length and would be subject to strict regulatory scrutiny.
Deutsche Bank is providing an independent assessment of a potential
combination, according to one person with knowledge of the
discussions. Separately, the German lender is also working as an
underwriter of Credit Suisse's capital increase.
In his email, Ethos's Kaufmann said the governance around the
restructuring "should be very clean and raise no concerns of
potential conflict of interest even if only 'in appearance'. CS
needs to restore trust and such doubts won't help to address this."
Klein's rise to CEO of CS First Boston – a business that could have
annual sales of $2.5 billion – took some bank insiders by surprise,
two sources familiar with the bank's restructuring told Reuters.
Until early October, as discussions on the reorganization became
more advanced, David Miller, Credit Suisse's investment banking and
capital markets boss, was still in the running for the top job at CS
First Boston, these sources said.
Miller, contacted through a spokesperson, declined to comment.
($1 = 0.9606 Swiss francs)
($1 = 0.9744 euros)
(Additional reporting by Saaed Azhar, David French and Greg
Roumeliotis; writing by Elisa Martinuzzi; editing by Edward Tobin)
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