| Swiss National Bank chief Hildebrand resigns |
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| Written by Administrator |
| Tuesday, 10 January 2012 12:30 |
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GENEVA — Swiss National Bank chief Philipp Hildebrand resigned Monday, acknowledging he could not prove his innocence amid a public uproar over his private currency deals. Hildebrand’s resignation took effect immediately, Switzerland’s central bank said in a brief statement. Vice chairman Thomas Jordan stepped in as chairman. Jan. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Philipp Hildebrand resigned as head of the Swiss central bank after a currency transaction by his wife last year dented the credibility of the franc's chief guardian. The move came just before a Swiss parliamentary committee was to grill Hildebrand behind closed doors about currency deals that raked in fat profits while his own central bank was actively working to lower the value of the Swiss franc. Switzerland has been in an uproar since news broke of the dollar swaps that netted Hildebrand and his wife Kashya, a former currency trader, tens of thousands of dollars in profits last year. At an impromptu press conference in the Swiss capital of Bern, Hildebrand emphasized Monday how proud he was of his achievements and of working for financial institutions in Switzerland and international organizations such as the World Bank. “I would like to think I have been a damn good central banker,” Hildebrand told reporters. “I deeply regret these mistakes as well as the entire situation.” Last Thursday he broke weeks of silence over the deal to deny any breach of central bank rules and to announce that he was donating the profits to charity. Four days later, he was out of a job. It was a shocking comedown for the man who a year ago had become the central bank’s youngest-ever president and chairman at 47. The former champion national swimmer had transformed himself into a financial prodigy and a champion of Swiss banking, with one publication calling him a financial “rock star.” “I personally advocated strongly and early for stricter capital requirements for the big banks,” he declared Monday. “The policy of the central bank was a success in recent years.” While still maintaining that he broke no central bank rules, Hildebrand said a central bank chairman must be viewed as beyond reproach and he could not prove that his wife carried out the dollar trading on Aug. 15 without his explicit consent. “I cannot once and for all prove that it was as I said it was,” he said. Two key bank actions helped the couple make money by effectively speculating against the value of the franc. On Aug. 17, the central bank increased the liquidity of the franc, which lifted the value of the dollar. Then, on Sept. 7, the bank set the minimum exchange rate of the euro at 1.20 Swiss francs. That helped to sharply raise the value of major currencies like the dollar against the franc. The Swiss central bank, like most others, prohibits senior officials from engaging in personal trading where they might profit from insider knowledge about an upcoming monetary policy decision. Hildebrand was cleared of any wrongdoing in a report in late December. The bank’s auditors concluded that the cheap purchase of U.S. dollars just as they were hitting a record low against the franc and two days before the SNB flooded the market with francs was “delicate.” But it found Hildebrand hadn’t breached any rules since he declared the transaction on Aug. 16.
Original article at http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/industries/swiss-national-bank-says-chairman-hildebrand-resigns-amid-uproar-over-private-forex-trade/2012/01/09/gIQAMEUKlP_story.html |
| Last Updated on Tuesday, 10 January 2012 12:34 |





