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6 Int'l Fin. L. Rev. 29 (1987)
Legislative Developments in Swiss Banking

handle is hein.journals/intfinr6 and id is 31 raw text is: Legislative developments in
Swiss banking
How have the new developments in Swiss banking law affected issues
such as the Marcos case? By Edmond Thvernier of Thvernier, Gillioz, de
Preux, Dorsaz in Geneva

In December 1982, the Federal Department of
Finance submitted a preliminary draft for a complete
revision of the Federal Bank Law of 1934 (see
K Hauri, Ausblick auf das neue Bankengesetz in '50 ans
de surveillance bancaire', Zuirich 1985 p177 ff). In May
1984 the Federal Council decided that the Law would
be revised only in part, and a new preliminary draft
was drawn up. Unlike the present Law, the draft Law
contains a definition of a bank as an enterprise
which is engaged, for its own account, in the busi-
ness of accepting funds from an indeterminate
number of customers with the intention of lending
funds to an indeterminate number of borrowers.
Customer funds are judged to be accepted on bank-
ing terms and conditions if funds received from an
indeterminate number of customers are deposited in
accounts or if funds are received in exchange for cer-
tificates of deposit or cash bonds (Article 3 parag-
raph 1). The issuance of long-term bonds is not con-
sidered as an acceptance of funds on banking terms
and conditions.
Anti-avoidance provision
Article 1 paragraph 3 of the draft Law provides that
enterprises or persons not subject to the Law cannot
be authorised to accept funds from customers on
banking terms and conditions. Either an enterprise
defined as a bank is entirely subject to the Law and
authorised to carry out borrowing and lending oper-
ations with an indeterminate number of persons, or
else it is not subject to the Law, in which case it can-
not accept funds on banking terms and conditions.
To prevent foreign banks trying to avoid the Law by
setting up financial companies in Switzerland
wholly financed by their parent companies and not
by banking means, the draft Law will encompass
companies dependent on foreign banks in Switzer-
land, if their purpose is to finance other enterprises
by granting loans or acquiring equity.
Authorisation. The draft Law will not alter the
legal requirements to be met to obtain a licence for
the exercise of banking activities. On bank organisa-
tion, the draft Law specifies that the bank's statutes,
articles of association and internal regulations must
define accurately the establishment's field of activity
(Article 5). All banks have to set up two distinct
bodies responsible for running the enterprise: a
management body and a Board of Directors, the lat-
ter being the highest decision-making authority and
in charge of supervision and control. This distribu-
tion of tasks is intended to ensure the bank's approp-
riate internal control. The two bodies will be totally
separate with no members in common. If the extent
International Financial Law Review January 1987

or the nature of operations require it, affairs will
have to be run on a collective basis, so ensuring a cer-
tain degree of supervision.This last requirement has
been criticised mainly because it would lead to con-
siderable uncertainty (see above all H Schoenle, 'Le
champ d'application de la loi et les conditions d'autorisa-
tion' in Colloque, l'avant-projet de la loi federale sur les
banques, Geneva, 1983, p16). Banking operations can-
not be run in the form of an association or a founda-
tion (Article 10). All other legal forms will continue to
be authorised.
Article 11 of the draft Law continues the require-
ment that for the authorisation of staff persons
entrusted with the running of the bank can at all
times furnish the guarantees of 'irreproachable con-
duct of activity'. What matters are not just profes-
sional qualifications and personal qualities, but also
the type and extent of the operations and manage-
ment of the establishment.
Under the terms of Article 12, members of manage-
ment and of the internal audit group are not allowed
to have other profit-making activities outside the
bank, unless authorised to do so by the Board of
Directors, while Article 13 imposes on management
members the obligation of being domiciled in Swit-
zerland. The bank can only be committed by a joint
signature (Article 14 paragraph 1), which is consis-
tent with the existence of collective management.
However, this requirement does not apply to forms
and other documents of daily correspondence. Arti-
cle 15 provides that any persons having an interest of
at least 10 per cent in the share capital of a bank must
furnish that information to the Federal Banking
Commission. This obligation of disclosure applies to
shareholders as well as to the bank itself.
Foreign banks
Under the terms of the Law now in force, a bank
organised under the laws of Switzerland is deemed
to be a 'foreign bank' when foreign equity holdings,
whether direct or indirect, exceed 50 per cent of its
share capital or votes, or when the bank is in some
other way controlled by foreign nationals.
Under Article 16 paragraph 1 of the draft Law,
foreign banks include branch offices in Switzerland
of foreign-based banks and banks organised under
Swiss law but directly or indirectly under the predo-
minant influence of foreign nationals, either through
a controlling interest or in some other way. The
notion of predominant foreign influence is difficult
to define (see A Levy, 'Les conditions d'autorisation et
les rtgles particulieres applicables aux  banques
domindes par l'dtranger' in Colloque international,

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