UBS Introduces Negative Interest Charges for Pension Funds
Switzerland's largest bank implements -0.2% charge on pension funds' liquid assets, sparking concerns in retirement sector.

Key Takeaways
- UBS has implemented a -0.2% charge on transaction accounts for institutional clients, specifically targeting pension funds and insurance companies.
- The new fee structure was triggered by the Swiss National Bank (SNB) lowering its key interest rate to 0%.
- UBS argues the charge is a 'liquidity availability fee' rather than negative interest, citing balance sheet expansion costs.
- Pension funds were given only two weeks' notice to adapt to the new fee structure.
- Other banks, such as Zurich Cantonal Bank (ZKB), do not impose a blanket fee, charging negative rates only in individual cases.
By The Numbers
They Said
"In essence, this results in nothing other than that holding liquidity leads to costs, even if the Swiss National Bank has not yet decided on negative interest rates."
"A pension fund simply cannot avoid keeping a certain amount of retirement savings in the account as liquid assets."