Switzerland:
SNB considers capital controls if euro falls apart
Switzerland
is drawing up plans for emergency measures including capital controls
in case the euro collapses although it does not expect to need them
and will continue to defend a cap on the franc in the meantime, the
head of the central bank said.
27
May, 2012
"We
must be prepared just in case the currency union collapses, although
I don't expect that," Swiss National Bank President Thomas
Jordan, who predicted the euro zone crisis in his 1994 doctoral
thesis, told the SonntagsZeitung newspaper.
Jordan
said a group set up by the Swiss government to consider possible
scenarios in the case of a euro break-up was focusing on instruments
to fight the strength of the safe haven franc which has soared during
the euro zone crisis.
"One
measure would be capital controls, in other words measures which
directly influence the flow of capital into Switzerland," he
said, but declined to give further details.
Jordan
last month dismissed negative rates on foreign deposits as a tool for
curbing safe haven flows. The Swiss imposed such deposit taxes as
they battled a red-hot currency in the 1970s, but they did little to
weaken the franc.
In
an attempt to prevent a recession and deflation from the soaring
currency, the SNB set a cap of 1.20 per euro on September 6 but the
franc is still 30 percent stronger than before the financial crisis,
hurting exporters and the tourism industry.
"Even
under the most difficult conditions we will also in future enforce
the minimum rate with all determination and align our monetary policy
with maintaining this minimum rate. I stress, even under very adverse
conditions," Jordan said.
Jordan
said the central bank had observed a significant upward pressure on
the franc as the euro zone crisis had worsened in recent weeks, but
he declined to say how much the SNB had spent on currency
interventions.
Asked
about calls from Swiss industry for the SNB to move the cap to try to
weaken the franc further, he said: "For many companies the
situation is very difficult. But we can't just arbitrarily manipulate
our currency.
"In
an even worse crisis situation, that would be fatal and
counterproductive ... The current minimum rate is realistic and has
helped the Swiss economy."
Jordan
stuck to the central bank's forecast for the Swiss economy to grow by
about 1 percent this year and said he currently saw neither
deflationary or inflationary risks.
Nick
Hayek, the chief executive of watchmaker Swatch Group, said on
Saturday the franc should be closer to 1.30-1.35 per euro but said
the SNB bank had missed an opportunity to shift its cap during a
leadership vacuum.
Philipp
Hildebrand resigned as SNB chief in January after a currency trading
scandal involving his wife and was only replaced on a permanent basis
by his deputy Jordan in April.
The
franc, which initially traded as weak as 1.25 after the cap was
imposed on speculation the SNB might shift the level, has hovered
close to the 1.20 mark in recent months as the euro zone crisis has
flared again, briefly breaching it in April.
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