Millennium Post

Indians’ funds in Swiss banks fall 70% to `9,771 crore

- DELHI/ZURICH:

NEW

Funds parked by Indian individual­s and firms in Swiss banks, including through local branches and other financial institutio­ns, fell sharply by 70 per cent in 2023 to a four-year low of 1.04 billion Swiss Francs (Rs 9,771 crore), annual data from Switzerlan­d’s central bank showed on Thursday.

The decline in aggregate funds of Indian clients with Swiss banks for the second consecutiv­e year, after hitting a 14-year-high of CHF 3.83 billion in 2021, was largely driven by a sharp plunge in funds held through bonds, securities and various other financial instrument­s.

Besides, the amount in customer deposit accounts and funds held through other bank branches in India also declined significan­tly, the data showed.

These are official figures reported by banks to the Swiss

National Bank (SNB) and do not indicate the quantum of the much-debated alleged black money held by Indians in Switzerlan­d. These figures also do not include the money that Indians, NRIs or others might have in Swiss banks in the names of third-country entities.

The total amount of CHF 1,039.8 million, described by the SNB as ‘total liabilitie­s’ of Swiss banks or ‘amounts due to’ their Indian clients at the end of 2023, included CHF 310 million in customer deposits (down from CHF 394 million at 2022-end), CHF 427 million held via other banks (down from CHF 1,110 million), CHF 10 million (down from CHF 24 million) through fiduciarie­s or trusts, and CHF 302 million as ‘other amounts due to customers in form of bonds, securities and various other financial instrument­s (down from CHF 1,896 million).

The total amount stood at a record high of nearly 6.5 billion Swiss francs in 2006, after which it has been mostly on a downward path, except for a few years including in 2011, 2013, 2017, 2020 and 2021, as per SNB data.

While all four components had declined during 2019, the year 2020 saw a significan­t plunge in customer deposits, while there was a surge across all categories in 2021. During 2022, only the fiduciarie­s segment saw an increase.

According to the SNB, its data for ‘total liabilitie­s’ of Swiss banks towards Indian clients takes into account all types of funds of Indian customers at Swiss banks, including deposits from individual­s, banks and enterprise­s. This includes data for branches of Swiss banks in India, as also non-deposit liabilitie­s.

On the other hand, the ‘locational banking statistics’ of the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement (BIS), which have been described in the past by Indian and Swiss authoritie­s as a more reliable measure for deposits by Indian individual­s in Swiss banks, showed a decline of nearly 25 per cent during 2023 in such funds to $70.6 million (Rs 663 crore).

It had dropped by 18 per cent in 2022 and by over 8 per cent in 2021, after rising by nearly 39 per cent in 2020.

This figure takes into account deposits as well as loans of Indian non-bank clients of Swiss-domiciled banks and had shown an increase of 7 per cent in 2019, after declining by 11 per cent in 2018 and by 44 per cent in 2017.

It peaked at over $2.3 billion (over Rs 9,000 crore) at the end of 2007.

Swiss authoritie­s always maintained that assets held by Indian residents in Switzerlan­d cannot be considered as ‘black money’ and they actively support India in its fight against tax fraud and evasion.

An automatic exchange of informatio­n in tax matters between Switzerlan­d and India has been in force since 2018.

The overall funds of foreign clients, including institutio­ns, declined to CHF 983 billion (over Rs 92 lakh crore) in 2023, from CHF 1.15 trillion at the end of 2022.

In terms of assets, Indian clients accounted for CHF 1.46 million at the end of 2023, marking a decline of 63 per cent from the previous year and the lowest level in over two decades. This included dues from Indian customers worth about CHF 188 million, up from CHF 164 million at the end of 2022.

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