Credit Suisse Cuts Profits $1B on Trader Errors

Trader 'error' prompts bank to take $2.85B writedown; shares plummet
By Jim O'Neill,  Newser Staff
Posted Feb 19, 2008 6:58 AM CST
Credit Suisse Cuts Profits $1B on Trader Errors
A client enters a Credit Suisse bank branch on February 12, 2008 in Zurich.   (Getty Images)

Credit Suisse share prices plummeted 10% today after the bank announced that some traders had overvalued asset-backed securities, prompting the bank to take a $2.85 billion writedown and drop first-quarter profit projections by $1 billion, Bloomberg reports. Switzerland’s second-largest bank suspended the traders and said it would review 2007 earnings. Markets, already skeptical about the health of the financial industry, reacted negatively.

Yesterday a Qatar sovereign wealth fund announced it had bought a stake in Credit Suisse, which earlier announced $1.8 billion in subprime writedowns for 2007. The news comes on the heels of the scandal at Societe Generale, where rogue trader Jerome Kerviel’s actions led to the worst losses in banking history, fueling concerns about trading oversight. (More Credit Suisse stories.)

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