Credit Suisse rescue presents 'buyer beware' moment for bank bondholders
Credit Suisse office in London · Reuters

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By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The rudest shock in the rushed deal to save embattled Swiss lender Credit Suisse Group AG was reserved for the holders of the bank's riskiest tranche of bonds.

Not only did investors discover they are the only investors not getting any compensation but that the long-established practice of giving bondholders priority over shareholders in debt recovery had been turned on its head.

Banks had already been paying far more this year than in the past for such hybrid capital, and now there would be no takers, analysts said.

Swiss authorities brokering Credit Suisse's rescue merger with UBS have said 16 billion Swiss francs ($17 billion) of its Additional Tier 1 (AT1) debt will be written down to zero.

That is the largest loss in the $275 billion AT1 debt market to date, dwarfing the 1.35 billion euros lost by bondholders at Spain's Banco Popular in 2017.

AT1 bond holders rank below those holding equity stakes in Credit Suisse who can expect to receive 0.76 Swiss francs per share.

That shock rippled through financial markets on Monday, causing bank credit default swaps to widen and stocks to fall. MSCI's world bank stock index stood at 84, down from 100 in two weeks.

European bank shares and AT1 bonds from other European banks tumbled as traders re-priced the risk and cost of banks' capital.

Bid prices on AT1 bonds from banks including Deutsche Bank, HSBC, UBS and BNP Paribas dropped 9-12 points on Monday, sending yields sharply higher, data from Tradeweb showed.

A UBS AT1 bond that is callable in January 2024 was trading at a yield of nearly 29%, up from 12% on Friday, demonstrating how much more costly such debt could become.

A London-listed exchange-traded fund which tracks banks' AT1 debt tumbled 15.7%.

"With the restructuring of Credit Suisse, no-one had really thought about how it would affect the AT1 and that was a fat tail risk," said Sean Darby, global equities strategist at Jefferies in Hong Kong.

The issue lay not in the structure of such debt but how markets were unprepared for this outcome in a debt structuring, he said.

"What the market is saying today, is that between now and maturity there's a risk on this debt which hadn't been priced correctly in light of what's happening in banks in the U.S. and around the world."

At Credit Suisse itself, dollar AT1 bonds were bid as low as 1 cent on the dollar, Tradeweb pricing showed, as investors braced for the wipeout.

"When an investor buys an AT1 he knows he's down the capital structure compared to senior. But he assumes he's above equity," Steven Major, global head of fixed income research at HSBC, said on the phone from Melbourne.