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Swiss National Bank

The Swiss National Bank (SNB; German: Schweizerische Nationalbank; French: Banque nationale suisse; Italian: Banca nazionale svizzera; Romansh: Banca naziunala svizra) is the central bank of Switzerland, responsible for the nation's monetary policy and the sole issuer of Swiss franc banknotes. The primary goal of its mandate is to ensure price stability, while taking economic developments into consideration.[5]

Swiss National Bank
Schweizerische Nationalbank
Banque nationale suisse
Banca nazionale svizzera
Banca naziunala svizra
Logo
HeadquartersBern and Zurich
Established16 January 1906 – 20 June 1907[1][2]
OwnershipMixed ownership.[3] Around 78% owned by Swiss public entities, the rest are publicly traded in SIX.
ChairmanThomas Jordan
Central bank ofSwitzerland
CurrencySwiss franc
CHF (ISO 4217)
Reserves560 630 million USD[4]
Websitewww.snb.ch
Headquarters on the Bundesplatz in Bern.

The SNB is an Aktiengesellschaft under special regulations and has two head offices, one in Bern and the other in Zurich.

History

 
Share of the Swiss National Bank, issued 6 June 1907

The bank formed as a result of the need for a reduction in the number of commercial banks issuing banknotes, which numbered 53 sometime after 1826. In the 1874 revision of the Federal Constitution it was given the task to oversee laws concerning the issuing of banknotes. In 1891, the Federal Constitution was revised again to entrust the Confederation with sole rights to issue banknotes.

1905 foundation

The Swiss National Bank was founded under the law of 6 October 1905 ('the National Bank Act'), which entered into force on 16 January 1906. Business was started on 20 June 1907.[6]

World War I

Sometime during World War I (1914–1917)[7] the bank was instructed to release notes of small denomination, for the first time, by the Federal Council of Switzerland.[1]

Interwar years

The Federal Council devalued the Swiss Franc during 1936, and as a result there was made available to the National Bank an amount of money, which the bank subsequently stored in a Währungsausgleichsfonds reserve for use in future situations of emergency.[8]

World War II

The Swiss National Bank provided 1.2 billion CHF to the Reichsbank, of this, a value of approximately 780 million CHF of the gold given to the National Bank was gold which had been looted by the forces of Germany. In addition the National Bank also exchanged between 1.2 and 1.6 billion CHF for gold from the Allied forces.[9] During 20 April 1944, gold from the gold reserves of Italy arrived from Como at the railway station within Chiasso.[10]

There is controversy over the role of the Swiss National Bank in the transfer of Nazi gold during World War II. The SNB was the largest gold distribution centre in continental Europe before the war. A study by the U.S. Department of State in 1997 notes that the bank "must have known that some portion of the gold it was receiving from the Reichsbank was looted from occupied countries".[11] This was confirmed by the Swiss Bergier commission in 1998 which concluded that the SNB received US$440 million in gold from Nazi sources,[12] of which US$316 million is estimated to have been looted.[citation needed] The gold from Nazi governorship sources was in the form of lingots containing gold looted from central banks of Europe and gold from Jews executed within the concentration camps established by the machination of the Nazi regime, which the SNB took without knowing these facts at the time, nor inquiring to any great degree in the process of its transfer into the possession of the SNB, according to Robert Vogler, a former archivist of the SNB.[13]

Post-war 20th century

In 1981 the bank participated in research involving Orell Füssli and an optical research group named Landis+Gyr, on matters of banknote design.[14]

During 1994 the bank was described as a joint-stock company acting under the administration and supervision of the Confederation. It had eight branches and twenty sub-branches within cantons. The governing board had overall executive management of the National Bank, with supervision entrusted to its shareholders, the banks' council, the banks' committee, its local committees and auditing committee. The three members of the governing board together decided the monetary policy of the Swiss National Bank. Towards the end of 1993 it had 566 employees.[1]

2004: formal independence from government

With the inception of Article 99 of the Swiss Federal Constitution, in May 2004, the National Bank achieved formal independence.[15]

2011: euro exchange rate cap

The SNB announced on 6 September 2011 to set a minimum exchange rate of CHF 1.20 per euro and that it would "enforce this minimum rate with the utmost determination and is prepared to buy foreign currency in unlimited quantities"[16][17] in order to take measures to stem the development of a possible recession. The bank stated the 1.20 exchange rate was defendable as the bank could potentially proceed to mint enough banknotes to control the rate sufficiently.[18]

The SNB announced on 15 January 2015 the euro currency arrangement would end as the euro crisis had passed and the Europeans would be making financial policy changes.[19]

Ownership as of 2021

As of 31 December 2021 78,17% of voting shares are held by public shareholders (cantons, cantonal banks, etc.). The remaining shares are largely in the hands of private persons. Shares of the SNB have been listed at the SIX Swiss Exchange since 1907.[20] As of April 2022, Theo Siegert, a German entrepreneur, holds 5.05% of its stocks, and as such, he is the third-largest shareholder, between the Canton of Vaud (3.401%) and the Canton of Zürich (5.2%).[21] The national bank's statutes, though, limit the voting rights of private investors to 100 shares.

2022 losses

On 9 January 2023 the SNB reported a loss of 132 billion CHF in its annual results for 2022.[22]

Responsibilities

 
Schweizerische Nationalbank (Swiss National Bank), 5 Franken (1914). The portrait depicts William Tell (based on Richard Kissling's monument in Altdorf), with the Rütli Mountain in the distance.
Signed by K. Bornhauser (Chief Cashier), Johann-Daniel Hirter (President of the Swiss National Bank Council), and August Burckhardt (Board member).

The basic governing principles of the Nationalbank are contained within Article 99 of the Federal Constitution, which deals with matters of monetary policy.[23] There are three numbered factors concerning principles explicitly mentioning the Nationalbank, of four altogether shown within the Article. The SNB is therefore obliged by constitutional statute law to act in accordance with the economic interests of Switzerland.[24] Accordingly, the prime function of the Nationalbank is:

to pursue a reliable monetary policy for the benefit of the Swiss economy and the Swiss people.[25]

The National Bank publishes within its own site a list of research done as work in progress by staff members, which begin at 2004 (2 papers), to 2005 (2), 2006 (11), 2007 (17), 2008 (19), 2009 (16), 2010 (19), 2011 (14), 2012 (16), 2013 (11), 2014 (13), and to 1 August 2015 there is shown nine papers,[26] a list of eight economic studies which relate to the tasks of the bank, listed from 2005,[27] in addition to a bi-annually published update of research, listed from 2012 to the present.[28]

Cash supply and distribution

The National Bank is entrusted with the note-issuing privilege. It supplies the economy with banknotes. It is also charged by the Confederation with the task of coin distribution.

Cashless payment transactions

In the field of cashless payment transactions, the National Bank provides services for payments between banks. These are settled in the Swiss Interbank Clearing (SIC) system via sight deposit accounts held with the National Bank.

Investment of currency reserves

The National Bank manages currency reserves. These engender confidence in the Swiss franc, help to prevent and overcome crises and may be utilized for interventions in the foreign exchange market.

Financial system stability

The National Bank contributes to the stability of the financial system by acting as an arbiter over monetary policy. Within the context of this task, it analyses sources of risk to the financial system, oversees systemically important payment and securities settlement systems and helps to promote an operational environment for the financial sector.

International monetary cooperation

Together with the federal authorities, the National Bank participates in international monetary cooperation and provides technical assistance.

Banker to the Confederation

The Swiss National Bank acts as banker to the Swiss Confederation. It processes payments on behalf of the Confederation, issues money market debt register claims and bonds, handles the safekeeping of securities and carries out money market and foreign exchange transactions.

Statistics

The National Bank compiles statistical data on banks and financial markets, the balance of payments, the international investment position and the Swiss financial accounts.

Policies

Investments

 
Sign asking the Swiss National Bank to divest from fossil fuels, at a climate demonstration in Bern (2019).

The Swiss National Bank invests its assets, particularly in the stock market. In 2018, its share portfolio stood at 153 billion Swiss francs.[29]

According to its guidelines, it "avoids shares in companies which produce internationally banned weapons, seriously violate fundamental human rights or systematically cause severe environmental damage".[30]

Since 2016, environmental associations and academics criticize the fact that these investments do not take into account the Paris Climate Agreement (article 2) and are responsible for at least 50 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions in 2017.[29][31][32]

Monetary policy

 
Switzerland bonds
  30 year
  10 year
  2 year
  3 month
  Overnight

The Swiss National Bank pursues a monetary policy serving the interests of the country as a whole. It must ensure price stability, while taking due account of economic developments. Monetary policy affects production and prices with a considerable time lag. Consequently, it is based on inflation forecasts rather than current inflation.

The SNB's monetary policy strategy consists of three elements: a definition of price stability (the SNB equates price stability with a rise in the national consumer price index of less than 2% per year), a medium-term conditional inflation forecast, and, at operational level, a target range for a reference interest rate, which is the Libor for three-month investments in Swiss francs.

Governance

General Meeting of Shareholders

The general meeting of shareholders is held once a year, usually in April. Owing to the SNB's public mandate, the powers of the shareholders' meeting are not as extensive as in joint-stock companies under private law.

Bank Council

The Bank Council oversees and controls the conduct of business by the Swiss National Bank and consists of 11 members. Six members, including the President and Vice President, are appointed by the Federal Council, and five by the Shareholders' Meeting. The Bank Council sets up four committees from its own ranks: an Audit Committee, a Risk Committee, a Remuneration Committee and an Appointment Committee.

A list of the Bank Council members is published on the SNB website.[33]

Governing board

The Swiss National Bank's management and executive body is the governing board. The governing board is responsible in particular for monetary policy, asset management strategy, contributing to the stability of the financial system and international monetary cooperation. The Governing Board consists of three members:

Chairmen of the governing board

Gold reserves

The SNB manages the official gold reserves of Switzerland, which as of 2008 amount to 1,145 tonnes and are valued at 30.5 billion CHF.[36] The gold is believed to be stored in huge vaults beneath the Federal Square (Bundesplatz) to the north of the federal parliament building in Bern, but the SNB treats the location of the gold reserves as a secret.[36] Independent confirmation of the gold's location was obtained by the Bernese newspaper Der Bund in 2008. It published a photograph of the bullion that a Keystone news agency photographer was allowed to take at the SNB premises in Bern in 2001.[37] Der Bund also quoted a retired official of the city's surveying office as saying that the gold vaults take up an area of roughly half the Federal Square and have a depth of dozens of meters, down to the level of the Aar river.[36] The SNB says that the gold reserves are stored in different safe places in Switzerland (70% -mostly under the Bundesplatz in Berne and at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel) and abroad (i.e. Bank of England and Bank of Canada).[38]

From the latter years of the 1990s until sometime during 2005, the National Bank transferred from its possession (incompetently, when the gold price was at its historic low)[39] half of its gold reserves, following the Nazi gold affair.[8]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c Pohl, Manfred; Freitag, Sabine, eds. (1994). Handbook on the History of European Banks. Elgar Original Reference Series. Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 1032, 1034–1035. ISBN 978-1-78195-421-8. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  2. ^ Berend, Ivan Tibor (2013). An Economic History of Nineteenth-Century Europe: Diversity and Industrialization. Cambridge University Press. p. 162. ISBN 978-1-107-03070-1. Retrieved 31 July 2015. ... the Swiss National Bank (founded in 1906) ...
  3. ^ "Breakdown of share ownership" (PDF). Swiss National Bank.
  4. ^ Weidner, Jan (2017). "The Organisation and Structure of Central Banks" (PDF). Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek.
  5. ^ "Goals and responsibilities of the SNB (overview)". Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  6. ^ "The National Bank as a joint-stock company". Swiss National Bank. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  7. ^ Taylor, Alan John Percivale (1961). The Origins of the Second World War (1st ed.).
  8. ^ a b Bernholz, Peter (2006). "Fuzzy and Opaque Public Property Rights Illustrated by Episodes in the History of the Swiss National Bank". In Bindseil, Ulrich; Richter, Rudolf; Haucap, Justus; Wey, Christian (eds.). Institutions in Perspective: Festschrift in Honor of Rudolf Richter on the Occasion of His 80th Birthday. Mohr Siebeck. pp. 219–234. ISBN 978-3-16-149061-3. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  9. ^ Marguerat, Philippe (11 January 2013). "German Gold – Allied Gold, 1940-1945". In Kreis, Georg (ed.). Switzerland and the Second World War. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-75670-2. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  10. ^ Toniolo, Gianni; Clement, Piet (16 May 2005). Central Bank Cooperation at the Bank for International Settlements, 1930–1973. Studies in Macroeconomic History. Cambridge University Press. p. 252. ISBN 0-521-84551-3.
  11. ^ Eizenstat, Stuart (2 June 1998). "Eizenstat Special Briefing on Nazi Gold". United States Department of State. Retrieved 5 July 2006.
  12. ^ "Switzerland and Gold Transactions in the Second World War" (PDF). Bergier Commission. May 1998. p. 64. Retrieved 5 July 2006. All in all, the Reichsbank shipped gold valued at 1,922 million francs, or 444 million dollars to Switzerland during the war.
  13. ^ Rickman, Gregg J. (31 December 2011). Conquest and Redemption: A History of Jewish Assets from the Holocaust. Transaction Publishers. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-4128-0899-6. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  14. ^ de Leeuw, Karl Maria Michael; Bergstra, Jan (2007). The History of Information Security: A Comprehensive Handbook. Elsevier. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-08-055058-9.
  15. ^ "Formal independence of Central Bank". International Currency Review. Currency Journals Limited. 30: 96. 2004. Following legislation agreed last year, the Swiss National Bank has achieved formal independence ... The National Bank law, which entered into force on 1st May 2004 ...
  16. ^ R. A. (6 September 2011). "No francs". The Economist. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  17. ^ "Chronicle of monetary events 1848–2019". www.snb.ch. Swiss National Bank. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  18. ^ Thomasson, Emma; Bosley, Catherine (6 September 2011). "Swiss draw line in the sand to cap runaway franc". Reuters. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  19. ^ C. W. (18 January 2015). "Why the Swiss unpegged the franc". The Economist. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  20. ^ "Breakdown of share ownership" (PDF). Swiss National Bank. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  21. ^ "Significant Shareholders". Six Exchange Regulation. Retrieved 29 April 2022.
  22. ^ Revill, John (9 January 2023). "Swiss National Bank posts record $143 billion loss in 2022". Reuters.
  23. ^ Constitution and laws (as at April 2015). Zürich: Swiss National Bank. 2015. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  24. ^ "Article 99 – Geld und Waehrung" (PDF). Swiss National Bank. Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  25. ^ (PDF) (2nd ed.). Swiss National Bank. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 May 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  26. ^ "Research: Working Papers". Swiss National Bank. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  27. ^ "Research: Economic Studies". Swiss National Bank. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  28. ^ . Swiss National Bank. Archived from the original on 4 December 2016. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  29. ^ a b Jourdan, Susana; Mirenowicz, Jacques (24 April 2018). "La BNS peut lutter contre le réchauffement climatique" [SNB can fight global warming]. Le temps (in French). Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  30. ^ "Investment Policy Guidelines" (PDF). Swiss National Bank. 27 May 2004. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  31. ^ "The Swiss National Bank's investments in the fossil fuel industry inflicts heavy losses to Switzerland". Artisans de la transition. 24 April 2018. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  32. ^ Gmür, Heidi (23 April 2018). "Finanzmärkte im Klimawandel" [Financial markets in climate change]. Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  33. ^ "Swiss National Bank bodies council".
  34. ^ a b "New SNB Governing Board" (PDF). Swiss National Bank.
  35. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Members of the Governing Board from 1907 onwards". Swiss National Bank.
  36. ^ a b c Schwendener, Pascal (25 July 2008). "Schatz unterm Bundesplatz: Das Gold der Nationalbank". Der Bund (in German). p. 18. Retrieved 27 July 2008.[dead link]
  37. ^ https://www.srf.ch/sendungen/einstein/fuenfmalklug/wo-ist-das-schweizer-gold
  38. ^ Talos, Christine (6 March 2014). "Politique monétaire: L'or de la BNS occupera le Conseil des Etats" [Monetary policy: SNB gold to occupy Council of States]. 24 heures (in French). Berne.
  39. ^ Mombelli, Armando (7 November 2014). "Swiss love affair with gold could heat up again". Swissinfo. Swiss Broadcasting Corporation.

External links

  • Official website

swiss, national, bank, german, schweizerische, nationalbank, french, banque, nationale, suisse, italian, banca, nazionale, svizzera, romansh, banca, naziunala, svizra, central, bank, switzerland, responsible, nation, monetary, policy, sole, issuer, swiss, fran. The Swiss National Bank SNB German Schweizerische Nationalbank French Banque nationale suisse Italian Banca nazionale svizzera Romansh Banca naziunala svizra is the central bank of Switzerland responsible for the nation s monetary policy and the sole issuer of Swiss franc banknotes The primary goal of its mandate is to ensure price stability while taking economic developments into consideration 5 Swiss National BankSchweizerische NationalbankBanque nationale suisseBanca nazionale svizzeraBanca naziunala svizraLogoHeadquartersBern and ZurichEstablished16 January 1906 20 June 1907 1 2 OwnershipMixed ownership 3 Around 78 owned by Swiss public entities the rest are publicly traded in SIX ChairmanThomas JordanCentral bank ofSwitzerlandCurrencySwiss francCHF ISO 4217 Reserves560 630 million USD 4 Websitewww wbr snb wbr chHeadquarters on the Bundesplatz in Bern The SNB is an Aktiengesellschaft under special regulations and has two head offices one in Bern and the other in Zurich Contents 1 History 1 1 1905 foundation 1 2 World War I 1 3 Interwar years 1 4 World War II 1 5 Post war 20th century 1 6 2004 formal independence from government 1 7 2011 euro exchange rate cap 1 8 Ownership as of 2021 1 9 2022 losses 2 Responsibilities 2 1 Cash supply and distribution 2 2 Cashless payment transactions 2 3 Investment of currency reserves 2 4 Financial system stability 2 5 International monetary cooperation 2 6 Banker to the Confederation 2 7 Statistics 3 Policies 3 1 Investments 3 2 Monetary policy 4 Governance 4 1 General Meeting of Shareholders 4 2 Bank Council 4 3 Governing board 4 3 1 Chairmen of the governing board 5 Gold reserves 6 See also 7 Notes and references 8 External linksHistory Edit Share of the Swiss National Bank issued 6 June 1907 The bank formed as a result of the need for a reduction in the number of commercial banks issuing banknotes which numbered 53 sometime after 1826 In the 1874 revision of the Federal Constitution it was given the task to oversee laws concerning the issuing of banknotes In 1891 the Federal Constitution was revised again to entrust the Confederation with sole rights to issue banknotes 1905 foundation Edit The Swiss National Bank was founded under the law of 6 October 1905 the National Bank Act which entered into force on 16 January 1906 Business was started on 20 June 1907 6 World War I Edit Sometime during World War I 1914 1917 7 the bank was instructed to release notes of small denomination for the first time by the Federal Council of Switzerland 1 Interwar years Edit The Federal Council devalued the Swiss Franc during 1936 and as a result there was made available to the National Bank an amount of money which the bank subsequently stored in a Wahrungsausgleichsfonds reserve for use in future situations of emergency 8 World War II Edit See also Switzerland during the World Wars The Swiss National Bank provided 1 2 billion CHF to the Reichsbank of this a value of approximately 780 million CHF of the gold given to the National Bank was gold which had been looted by the forces of Germany In addition the National Bank also exchanged between 1 2 and 1 6 billion CHF for gold from the Allied forces 9 During 20 April 1944 gold from the gold reserves of Italy arrived from Como at the railway station within Chiasso 10 There is controversy over the role of the Swiss National Bank in the transfer of Nazi gold during World War II The SNB was the largest gold distribution centre in continental Europe before the war A study by the U S Department of State in 1997 notes that the bank must have known that some portion of the gold it was receiving from the Reichsbank was looted from occupied countries 11 This was confirmed by the Swiss Bergier commission in 1998 which concluded that the SNB received US 440 million in gold from Nazi sources 12 of which US 316 million is estimated to have been looted citation needed The gold from Nazi governorship sources was in the form of lingots containing gold looted from central banks of Europe and gold from Jews executed within the concentration camps established by the machination of the Nazi regime which the SNB took without knowing these facts at the time nor inquiring to any great degree in the process of its transfer into the possession of the SNB according to Robert Vogler a former archivist of the SNB 13 Post war 20th century Edit In 1981 the bank participated in research involving Orell Fussli and an optical research group named Landis Gyr on matters of banknote design 14 During 1994 the bank was described as a joint stock company acting under the administration and supervision of the Confederation It had eight branches and twenty sub branches within cantons The governing board had overall executive management of the National Bank with supervision entrusted to its shareholders the banks council the banks committee its local committees and auditing committee The three members of the governing board together decided the monetary policy of the Swiss National Bank Towards the end of 1993 it had 566 employees 1 2004 formal independence from government Edit With the inception of Article 99 of the Swiss Federal Constitution in May 2004 the National Bank achieved formal independence 15 2011 euro exchange rate cap Edit The SNB announced on 6 September 2011 to set a minimum exchange rate of CHF 1 20 per euro and that it would enforce this minimum rate with the utmost determination and is prepared to buy foreign currency in unlimited quantities 16 17 in order to take measures to stem the development of a possible recession The bank stated the 1 20 exchange rate was defendable as the bank could potentially proceed to mint enough banknotes to control the rate sufficiently 18 The SNB announced on 15 January 2015 the euro currency arrangement would end as the euro crisis had passed and the Europeans would be making financial policy changes 19 Ownership as of 2021 Edit As of 31 December 2021 78 17 of voting shares are held by public shareholders cantons cantonal banks etc The remaining shares are largely in the hands of private persons Shares of the SNB have been listed at the SIX Swiss Exchange since 1907 20 As of April 2022 Theo Siegert a German entrepreneur holds 5 05 of its stocks and as such he is the third largest shareholder between the Canton of Vaud 3 401 and the Canton of Zurich 5 2 21 The national bank s statutes though limit the voting rights of private investors to 100 shares 2022 losses Edit On 9 January 2023 the SNB reported a loss of 132 billion CHF in its annual results for 2022 22 Responsibilities Edit Schweizerische Nationalbank Swiss National Bank 5 Franken 1914 The portrait depicts William Tell based on Richard Kissling s monument in Altdorf with the Rutli Mountain in the distance Signed by K Bornhauser Chief Cashier Johann Daniel Hirter President of the Swiss National Bank Council and August Burckhardt Board member The basic governing principles of the Nationalbank are contained within Article 99 of the Federal Constitution which deals with matters of monetary policy 23 There are three numbered factors concerning principles explicitly mentioning the Nationalbank of four altogether shown within the Article The SNB is therefore obliged by constitutional statute law to act in accordance with the economic interests of Switzerland 24 Accordingly the prime function of the Nationalbank is to pursue a reliable monetary policy for the benefit of the Swiss economy and the Swiss people 25 The National Bank publishes within its own site a list of research done as work in progress by staff members which begin at 2004 2 papers to 2005 2 2006 11 2007 17 2008 19 2009 16 2010 19 2011 14 2012 16 2013 11 2014 13 and to 1 August 2015 there is shown nine papers 26 a list of eight economic studies which relate to the tasks of the bank listed from 2005 27 in addition to a bi annually published update of research listed from 2012 to the present 28 Cash supply and distribution Edit The National Bank is entrusted with the note issuing privilege It supplies the economy with banknotes It is also charged by the Confederation with the task of coin distribution Cashless payment transactions Edit In the field of cashless payment transactions the National Bank provides services for payments between banks These are settled in the Swiss Interbank Clearing SIC system via sight deposit accounts held with the National Bank Investment of currency reserves Edit The National Bank manages currency reserves These engender confidence in the Swiss franc help to prevent and overcome crises and may be utilized for interventions in the foreign exchange market Financial system stability Edit The National Bank contributes to the stability of the financial system by acting as an arbiter over monetary policy Within the context of this task it analyses sources of risk to the financial system oversees systemically important payment and securities settlement systems and helps to promote an operational environment for the financial sector International monetary cooperation Edit Together with the federal authorities the National Bank participates in international monetary cooperation and provides technical assistance Banker to the Confederation Edit The Swiss National Bank acts as banker to the Swiss Confederation It processes payments on behalf of the Confederation issues money market debt register claims and bonds handles the safekeeping of securities and carries out money market and foreign exchange transactions Statistics Edit The National Bank compiles statistical data on banks and financial markets the balance of payments the international investment position and the Swiss financial accounts Policies EditInvestments Edit Sign asking the Swiss National Bank to divest from fossil fuels at a climate demonstration in Bern 2019 The Swiss National Bank invests its assets particularly in the stock market In 2018 its share portfolio stood at 153 billion Swiss francs 29 According to its guidelines it avoids shares in companies which produce internationally banned weapons seriously violate fundamental human rights or systematically cause severe environmental damage 30 Since 2016 environmental associations and academics criticize the fact that these investments do not take into account the Paris Climate Agreement article 2 and are responsible for at least 50 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions in 2017 29 31 32 Monetary policy Edit Switzerland bonds 30 year 10 year 2 year 3 month Overnight The Swiss National Bank pursues a monetary policy serving the interests of the country as a whole It must ensure price stability while taking due account of economic developments Monetary policy affects production and prices with a considerable time lag Consequently it is based on inflation forecasts rather than current inflation The SNB s monetary policy strategy consists of three elements a definition of price stability the SNB equates price stability with a rise in the national consumer price index of less than 2 per year a medium term conditional inflation forecast and at operational level a target range for a reference interest rate which is the Libor for three month investments in Swiss francs Governance EditGeneral Meeting of Shareholders Edit The general meeting of shareholders is held once a year usually in April Owing to the SNB s public mandate the powers of the shareholders meeting are not as extensive as in joint stock companies under private law Bank Council Edit The Bank Council oversees and controls the conduct of business by the Swiss National Bank and consists of 11 members Six members including the President and Vice President are appointed by the Federal Council and five by the Shareholders Meeting The Bank Council sets up four committees from its own ranks an Audit Committee a Risk Committee a Remuneration Committee and an Appointment Committee A list of the Bank Council members is published on the SNB website 33 Governing board Edit The Swiss National Bank s management and executive body is the governing board The governing board is responsible in particular for monetary policy asset management strategy contributing to the stability of the financial system and international monetary cooperation The Governing Board consists of three members Chairman Thomas Jordan 34 Vice Chairman Fritz Zurbrugg 34 Member Andrea M MaechlerChairmen of the governing board Edit Heinrich Kundert 20 06 1907 30 11 1915 35 August Burckhardt 01 12 1915 26 11 1924 35 Gottlieb Bachmann 01 07 1925 15 03 1939 35 Ernst Weber 01 04 1939 31 03 1947 35 Paul Keller 01 04 1947 31 05 1956 35 Walter Schwegler 01 06 1956 31 08 1966 35 Edwin Stopper 01 09 1966 30 04 1974 35 Fritz Leutwiler 01 05 1974 31 12 1984 35 Pierre Languetin 01 01 1985 30 04 1988 35 Markus Lusser 01 05 1988 30 04 1996 35 Hans Meyer 01 05 1996 31 12 2000 35 Jean Pierre Roth 01 01 2001 31 12 2009 35 Philipp Hildebrand 01 01 2010 09 01 2012 35 Thomas J Jordan Since 18 04 2012 35 Gold reserves EditThe SNB manages the official gold reserves of Switzerland which as of 2008 amount to 1 145 tonnes and are valued at 30 5 billion CHF 36 The gold is believed to be stored in huge vaults beneath the Federal Square Bundesplatz to the north of the federal parliament building in Bern but the SNB treats the location of the gold reserves as a secret 36 Independent confirmation of the gold s location was obtained by the Bernese newspaper Der Bund in 2008 It published a photograph of the bullion that a Keystone news agency photographer was allowed to take at the SNB premises in Bern in 2001 37 Der Bund also quoted a retired official of the city s surveying office as saying that the gold vaults take up an area of roughly half the Federal Square and have a depth of dozens of meters down to the level of the Aar river 36 The SNB says that the gold reserves are stored in different safe places in Switzerland 70 mostly under the Bundesplatz in Berne and at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel and abroad i e Bank of England and Bank of Canada 38 From the latter years of the 1990s until sometime during 2005 the National Bank transferred from its possession incompetently when the gold price was at its historic low 39 half of its gold reserves following the Nazi gold affair 8 See also EditBanking in Switzerland Economy of Switzerland SARON Swiss Average Rate Overnight Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority FINMA Swiss gold reserves referendum 2014 Swiss sovereign money referendum 2018Notes and references Edit a b c Pohl Manfred Freitag Sabine eds 1994 Handbook on the History of European Banks Elgar Original Reference Series Edward Elgar Publishing pp 1032 1034 1035 ISBN 978 1 78195 421 8 Retrieved 31 July 2015 Berend Ivan Tibor 2013 An Economic History of Nineteenth Century Europe Diversity and Industrialization Cambridge University Press p 162 ISBN 978 1 107 03070 1 Retrieved 31 July 2015 the Swiss National Bank founded in 1906 Breakdown of share ownership PDF Swiss National Bank Weidner Jan 2017 The Organisation and Structure of Central Banks PDF Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek Goals and responsibilities of the SNB overview Retrieved 3 May 2021 The National Bank as a joint stock company Swiss National Bank Retrieved 7 January 2020 Taylor Alan John Percivale 1961 The Origins of the Second World War 1st ed a b Bernholz Peter 2006 Fuzzy and Opaque Public Property Rights Illustrated by Episodes in the History of the Swiss National Bank In Bindseil Ulrich Richter Rudolf Haucap Justus Wey Christian eds Institutions in Perspective Festschrift in Honor of Rudolf Richter on the Occasion of His 80th Birthday Mohr Siebeck pp 219 234 ISBN 978 3 16 149061 3 Retrieved 31 July 2015 Marguerat Philippe 11 January 2013 German Gold Allied Gold 1940 1945 In Kreis Georg ed Switzerland and the Second World War Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 75670 2 Retrieved 31 July 2015 Toniolo Gianni Clement Piet 16 May 2005 Central Bank Cooperation at the Bank for International Settlements 1930 1973 Studies in Macroeconomic History Cambridge University Press p 252 ISBN 0 521 84551 3 Eizenstat Stuart 2 June 1998 Eizenstat Special Briefing on Nazi Gold United States Department of State Retrieved 5 July 2006 Switzerland and Gold Transactions in the Second World War PDF Bergier Commission May 1998 p 64 Retrieved 5 July 2006 All in all the Reichsbank shipped gold valued at 1 922 million francs or 444 million dollars to Switzerland during the war Rickman Gregg J 31 December 2011 Conquest and Redemption A History of Jewish Assets from the Holocaust Transaction Publishers p 37 ISBN 978 1 4128 0899 6 Retrieved 1 August 2015 de Leeuw Karl Maria Michael Bergstra Jan 2007 The History of Information Security A Comprehensive Handbook Elsevier p 232 ISBN 978 0 08 055058 9 Formal independence of Central Bank International Currency Review Currency Journals Limited 30 96 2004 Following legislation agreed last year the Swiss National Bank has achieved formal independence The National Bank law which entered into force on 1st May 2004 R A 6 September 2011 No francs The Economist Retrieved 1 August 2016 Chronicle of monetary events 1848 2019 www snb ch Swiss National Bank Retrieved 7 January 2020 Thomasson Emma Bosley Catherine 6 September 2011 Swiss draw line in the sand to cap runaway franc Reuters Retrieved 1 August 2015 C W 18 January 2015 Why the Swiss unpegged the franc The Economist Retrieved 18 November 2015 Breakdown of share ownership PDF Swiss National Bank Retrieved 4 July 2022 Significant Shareholders Six Exchange Regulation Retrieved 29 April 2022 Revill John 9 January 2023 Swiss National Bank posts record 143 billion loss in 2022 Reuters Constitution and laws as at April 2015 Zurich Swiss National Bank 2015 Retrieved 31 July 2015 Article 99 Geld und Waehrung PDF Swiss National Bank Retrieved 31 July 2015 The Swiss National Bank and that vital commodity money PDF 2nd ed Swiss National Bank 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 12 May 2015 Retrieved 1 August 2015 Research Working Papers Swiss National Bank Retrieved 1 August 2015 Research Economic Studies Swiss National Bank Retrieved 1 August 2015 Research Research Update Swiss National Bank Archived from the original on 4 December 2016 Retrieved 1 August 2015 a b Jourdan Susana Mirenowicz Jacques 24 April 2018 La BNS peut lutter contre le rechauffement climatique SNB can fight global warming Le temps in French Retrieved 25 April 2018 Investment Policy Guidelines PDF Swiss National Bank 27 May 2004 Retrieved 25 April 2018 The Swiss National Bank s investments in the fossil fuel industry inflicts heavy losses to Switzerland Artisans de la transition 24 April 2018 Retrieved 25 April 2018 Gmur Heidi 23 April 2018 Finanzmarkte im Klimawandel Financial markets in climate change Neue Zurcher Zeitung in German Retrieved 25 April 2018 Swiss National Bank bodies council a b New SNB Governing Board PDF Swiss National Bank a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Members of the Governing Board from 1907 onwards Swiss National Bank a b c Schwendener Pascal 25 July 2008 Schatz unterm Bundesplatz Das Gold der Nationalbank Der Bund in German p 18 Retrieved 27 July 2008 dead link https www srf ch sendungen einstein fuenfmalklug wo ist das schweizer gold Talos Christine 6 March 2014 Politique monetaire L or de la BNS occupera le Conseil des Etats Monetary policy SNB gold to occupy Council of States 24 heures in French Berne Mombelli Armando 7 November 2014 Swiss love affair with gold could heat up again Swissinfo Swiss Broadcasting Corporation External links EditOfficial website Portals Economy Switzerland Banks Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Swiss National Bank amp oldid 1133004585, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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