6-K 1 a210527bs-6k.htm 6-K
UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

Form 6-K
REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER PURSUANT TO RULE 13a-16 OR 15d-16 UNDER THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
May 27, 2021
Commission File Number 001-15244
CREDIT SUISSE GROUP AG
(Translation of registrant’s name into English)
Paradeplatz 8, CH 8001 Zurich, Switzerland
(Address of principal executive office)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.
   Form 20-F      Form 40-F   
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1):
Note: Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(1) only permits the submission in paper of a Form 6-K if submitted solely to provide an attached annual report to security holders.
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is submitting the Form 6-K in paper as permitted by Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7):
Note: Regulation S-T Rule 101(b)(7) only permits the submission in paper of a Form 6-K if submitted to furnish a report or other document that the registrant foreign private issuer must furnish and make public under the laws of the jurisdiction in which the registrant is incorporated, domiciled or legally organized (the registrant’s “home country”), or under the rules of the home country exchange on which the registrant’s securities are traded, as long as the report or other document is not a press release, is not required to be and has not been distributed to the registrant’s security holders, and, if discussing a material event, has already been the subject of a Form 6-K submission or other Commission filing on EDGAR.
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
   Yes      No   
If “Yes” is marked, indicate below the file number assigned to the registrant in connection with Rule 12g3-2(b): 82-.






Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
CREDIT SUISSE GROUP AG
 (Registrant)
Date: May 27, 2021
By:
/s/ Joachim Oechslin
Joachim Oechslin
Chief Risk Officer a.i.
By:
/s/ David R. Mathers
David R. Mathers
Chief Financial Officer












For purposes of this report, unless the context otherwise requires, the terms “Credit Suisse,” the “Group,” “we,” “us” and “our” mean Credit Suisse Group AG and its consolidated subsidiaries. The business of Credit Suisse AG, the direct bank subsidiary of the Group, is substantially similar to the Group, and we use these terms to refer to both when the subject is the same or substantially similar. We use the term the “Bank” when we are only referring to Credit Suisse AG and its consolidated subsidiaries.
Abbreviations are explained in the List of abbreviations in the back of this report.
Publications referenced in this report, whether via website links or otherwise, are not incorporated into this report.
In various tables, use of “–” indicates not meaningful or not applicable.


Pillar 3 and regulatory disclosures 1Q21
Credit Suisse Group AG

Introduction
Swiss capital requirements
Risk-weightedassets
Additional regulatory disclosures
List of abbreviations
Cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information


1



Introduction
General
This report as of March 31, 2021 for the Group is based on the revised Circular 2016/1 “Disclosure – banks” (FINMA circular) issued by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority FINMA (FINMA) on October 31, 2019. The revised FINMA circular includes the implementation of the revised Pillar 3 disclosure requirements issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) in August and December 2019.
This report is produced and published quarterly, in accordance with FINMA requirements. The reporting frequency for each disclosure requirement is either annual, semi-annual or quarterly. This document should be read in conjunction with the Pillar 3 and regulatory disclosures – Credit Suisse Group AG 4Q20, the Credit Suisse Annual Report 2020 and the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21, which includes important information on regulatory capital and risk management (specific references have been made herein to these documents) and regulatory developments and proposals.
> Refer to “Pillar 3 and regulatory disclosures – Credit Suisse Group AG 4Q20” under credit-suisse.com/regulatorydisclosures for the annual qualitative disclosures required by the FINMA circular.
The highest consolidated entity in the Group to which the FINMA circular applies is Credit Suisse Group.
These disclosures were verified and approved internally in line with our board-approved policy on disclosure controls and procedures. The level of internal control processes for these disclosures is similar to those applied to the Group’s quarterly and annual financial reports. This report has not been audited by the Group’s external auditors.
For certain prescribed table formats where line items have zero balances, such line items have not been presented.
Other regulatory disclosures
In connection with the implementation of Basel III, certain regulatory disclosures for the Group and certain of its subsidiaries are required. The Group’s Pillar 3 disclosure, regulatory disclosures, additional information on capital instruments, including the main features of regulatory capital instruments and total loss-absorbing capacity (TLAC)-eligible instruments that form part of the eligible capital base and TLAC resources, G-SIB financial indicators, reconciliation requirements, leverage ratios and certain liquidity disclosures as well as regulatory disclosures for subsidiaries can be found on our website.
> Refer to credit-suisse.com/regulatorydisclosures for additional information.
Regulatory developments
COVID-19 and related regulatory measures
The Swiss government, the Swiss National Bank and FINMA have already taken various measures to mitigate the consequences for the economy and the financial system. Governments and regulators in other jurisdictions where we have operations have also taken a number of emergency and temporary measures to address the financial and economic pressures arising from the COVID-19 pandemic.
> Refer to “COVID-19 pandemic” (page 14) in I – Credit Suisse results – Credit Suisse – Other information in the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21 for further information.
2

Swiss capital requirements
FINMA requires the Group to fully comply with the special requirements for systemically important financial institutions operating internationally. The following tables show the Swiss capital and leverage requirements and metrics as required by FINMA.
> Refer to “Swiss requirements” (page 49) and “Swiss metrics” (pages 54 to 55) in II – Treasury, risk, balance sheet and off-balance sheet – Capital management in the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21 for further information on general Swiss requirements and the related metrics.
Swiss capital requirements and metrics

end of 1Q21

CHF million
in %
of RWA
Swiss risk-weighted assets          
Swiss risk-weighted assets 303,380
Risk-based capital requirements (going-concern) based on Swiss capital ratios          
Total 1 45,328 14.941
   of which CET1: minimum  13,652 4.5
   of which CET1: buffer  16,686 5.5
   of which CET1: countercyclical buffers  63 0.021
   of which additional tier 1: minimum  10,618 3.5
   of which additional tier 1: buffer  2,427 0.8
Swiss eligible capital (going-concern)          
Swiss CET1 capital and additional tier 1 capital 2 53,406 17.6
   of which CET1 capital 3 36,959 12.2
   of which additional tier 1 high-trigger capital instruments  11,778 3.9
   of which additional tier 1 low-trigger capital instruments 4 4,669 1.5
Risk-based requirements for additional total loss-absorbing capacity (gone-concern) based on Swiss capital ratios          
Total according to size and market share 5 43,383 14.3
Reductions due to rebates in accordance with article 133 of the CAO (7,782) (2.565)
Reductions due to the holding of additional instruments in the form of convertible capital in accordance with Art. 132 para 4 CAO (1,272) (0.419)
Total, net 34,330 11.316
Eligible additional total loss-absorbing capacity (gone-concern)          
Total 6 52,187 17.2
   of which bail-in instruments 7 49,644 16.4
   of which tier 2 low-trigger capital instruments  2,543 0.8
Rounding differences may occur.
1
The total requirement includes the FINMA Pillar 2 capital add-on of CHF 1,882 million relating to the supply chain finance funds matter. This Pillar 2 capital add-on equates to an additional Swiss CET1 capital ratio requirement of 62 basis points.
2
Excludes tier 1 capital, which is used to fulfill gone-concern requirements.
3
Excludes CET1 capital, which is used to fulfill gone-concern requirements.
4
If issued before July 1, 2016, such capital instruments qualify as additional tier 1 high-trigger capital instruments until their first call date according to the transitional Swiss "Too Big to Fail" rules.
5
Consists of a base requirement of 12.86%, or CHF 39,015 million, and a surcharge of 1.44%, or CHF 4,368 million.
6
Amounts are shown on a look-through basis. Certain tier 2 capital instruments are subject to phase out through 2022. As of 1Q21, total eligible gone-concern capital was CHF 52,456 million including CHF 269 million of such instruments.
7
Includes instruments eligible as gone-concern capacity, where the Group has used the proceeds of CHF 5,198 million to offset an exposure which Credit Suisse AG has from providing net senior funding to Group of CHF 6,990 million.
3

Swiss leverage requirements and metrics

end of 1Q21

CHF million
in %
of LRD
Leverage exposure          
Leverage ratio denominator 967,798
Unweighted capital requirements (going-concern) based on Swiss leverage ratio          
Total 1 50,272 5.19
   of which CET1: minimum  14,517 1.5
   of which CET1: buffer  19,356 2.0
   of which additional tier 1: minimum  14,517 1.5
Swiss eligible capital (going-concern)          
Swiss CET1 capital and additional tier 1 capital 2 53,406 5.5
   of which CET1 capital 3 36,959 3.8
   of which additional tier 1 high-trigger capital instruments  11,778 1.2
   of which additional tier 1 low-trigger capital instruments 4 4,669 0.5
Unweighted requirements for additional total loss-absorbing capacity (gone-concern) based on the Swiss leverage ratio          
Total according to size and market share 5 48,390 5.0
Reductions due to rebates in accordance with article 133 of the CAO (8,710) (0.9)
Reductions due to the holding of additional instruments in the form of convertible capital in accordance with Art. 132 para 4 CAO (1,272) (0.131)
Total, net 38,408 3.969
Eligible additional total loss-absorbing capacity (gone-concern)          
Total 6 52,187 5.4
   of which bail-in instruments 7 49,644 5.1
   of which tier 2 low-trigger capital instruments  2,543 0.3
Rounding differences may occur.
1
The total requirement includes the FINMA Pillar 2 capital add-on of CHF 1,882 million relating to the supply chain finance funds matter. This Pillar 2 capital add-on equates to an additional Swiss CET1 leverage ratio requirement of 19 basis points.
2
Excludes tier 1 capital, which is used to fulfill gone-concern requirements.
3
Excludes CET1 capital, which is used to fulfill gone-concern requirements.
4
If issued before July 1, 2016, such capital instruments qualify as additional tier 1 high-trigger capital instruments until their first call date according to the transitional Swiss "Too Big to Fail" rules.
5
Consists of a base requirement of 4.5%, or CHF 43,551 million, and a surcharge of 0.5%, or CHF 4,839 million.
6
Amounts are shown on a look-through basis. Certain tier 2 capital instruments are subject to phase out through 2022. As of 1Q21, total eligible gone-concern capital was CHF 52,456 million including CHF 269 million of such instruments.
7
Includes instruments eligible as gone-concern capacity, where the Group has used the proceeds of CHF 5,198 million to offset an exposure which Credit Suisse AG has from providing net senior funding to Group of CHF 6,990 million.
4

Risk-weighted assets
Overview
With the adoption of the revised FINMA circular, risk-weighted assets (RWA) presented in this report are based on the Swiss capital requirements.
> Refer to “Swiss requirements” (page 49) in II – Treasury, risk, balance sheet and off-balance sheet – Capital management – Regulatory framework in the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21 for further information on Swiss capital requirements.
The following table provides an overview of total Swiss RWA forming the denominator of the risk-based capital requirements.
RWA of CHF 303.4 billion as of the end of 1Q21 increased 10% compared to the end of 4Q20, mainly related to the foreign exchange impact and movements in risk levels, primarily reflecting business growth. In addition, FINMA imposed a temporary add-on of CHF 5.8 billion (USD 6.1 billion) to the Group’s credit risk RWA in relation to its exposure in the US-based hedge fund matter, which was included in movements in risk levels.
RWA flow statements for credit risk, counterparty credit risk (CCR) and market risk are presented below.
> Refer to “Risk-weighted assets” (pages 52 to 53) in II – Treasury, risk, balance sheet and off-balance sheet – Capital Management in the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21 for further information on movements in risk-weighted assets in 1Q21.
OV1 – Overview of Swiss risk-weighted assets and capital requirements 
     
Risk-weighted assets
Capital
requirement
1
end of 1Q21 4Q20 1Q21
CHF million  
Credit risk (excluding counterparty credit risk) 148,419 134,648 11,874
   of which standardized approach (SA)  34,148 26,237 2,732
   of which supervisory slotting approach  4,595 4,246 368
   of which advanced internal ratings-based (A-IRB) approach  109,676 104,165 8,774
Counterparty credit risk 25,049 22,577 2,004
   of which standardized approach for counterparty credit risk (SA-CCR)  5,119 4,283 410
   of which internal model method (IMM)  18,553 16,589 1,484
   of which other counterparty credit risk 2 1,377 1,705 110
Credit valuation adjustments (CVA) 8,978 8,498 718
Equity positions in the banking book under the simple risk weight approach 4,416 4,427 353
Equity investments in funds - look-through approach 2,923 2,998 234
Equity investments in funds - mandate-based approach 34 71 3
Equity investments in funds - fall-back approach 578 506 46
Settlement risk 231 249 18
Securitization exposures in the banking book 14,345 12,962 1,148
   of which securitization internal ratings-based approach (SEC-IRBA)  7,467 7,322 597
   of which securitization external ratings-based approach (SEC-ERBA), including internal assessment approach (IAA)  1,506 1,285 121
   of which securitization standardized approach (SEC-SA)  5,372 4,355 430
Market risk 21,934 18,317 1,754
   of which standardized approach (SA)  1,666 1,478 133
   of which internal model approach (IMA)  20,268 16,839 1,621
Operational risk (AMA) 63,511 58,655 5,081
Amounts below the thresholds for deduction (subject to 250% risk weight) 12,962 11,668 1,037
Total  303,380 275,576 24,270
1
Calculated as 8% of Swiss risk-weighted assets, based on total capital minimum requirements, excluding capital conservation buffer and G-SIB buffer requirements.
2
Includes RWA for contributions to the default fund of a central counterparty and loans hedged by centrally cleared CDS.
5

Risk-weighted assets flow statements
Credit risk and counterparty credit risk
The following table presents the definitions of the RWA flow statements components for credit risk and CCR.
Definition of risk-weighted assets movement components related to credit risk and CCR
Description Definition
Asset size    Represents changes on the portfolio size arising in the ordinary course of business (including
new businesses). Asset size also includes movements arising from the application of the
comprehensive approach with regard to the treatment of financial collateral
Asset quality/credit quality of counterparties  Represents changes in average risk weighting across credit risk classes
Model and parameter updates   Represents movements arising from internally driven or externally mandated updates to models
and recalibrations of model parameters specific only to Credit Suisse
Methodology and policy changes    Represents movements arising from externally mandated regulatory methodology and policy
changes to accounting and exposure classification and treatment policies not specific only
to Credit Suisse
Acquisitions and disposals  Represents changes in book sizes due to acquisitions and disposals of entities
Foreign exchange impact  Represents changes in exchange rates of the transaction currencies compared to the Swiss franc
Other  Represents changes that cannot be attributed to any other category
Credit risk RWA movements
The following table presents the 1Q21 flow statement explaining the variations in the credit risk RWA determined under an IRB approach.
CR8 – Risk-weighted assets flow statements of credit risk exposures under IRB
1Q21
CHF million  
Risk-weighted assets at beginning of period  108,411
Asset size 2,883
Asset quality (502)
Model and parameter updates (539)
Foreign exchange impact 4,018
Risk-weighted assets at end of period  114,271
Includes RWA related to the A-IRB approach and supervisory slotting approach.
Credit risk RWA under IRB increased CHF 5.9 billion to CHF 114.3 billion compared to the end of 4Q20, driven by the foreign exchange impact and movements in risk levels attributable to asset size, partially offset by decreases related to model and parameter updates and decreases in risk levels attributable to asset quality. The increases in risk levels attributable to asset size were mainly driven by corporate and retail lending, lombard lending and mortgages. The decreases related to model and parameter updates were mainly driven by the phase-out of a multiplier on certain corporate exposures and certain portfolio improvements, partially offset by the implementation of a more conservative new model for corporate clients.
Counterparty credit risk RWA movements
The following table presents the 1Q21 flow statement explaining changes in CCR RWA determined under the Internal Model Method (IMM) for CCR (derivatives and SFTs).
CCR7 – Risk-weighted assets flow statements of CCR exposures under IMM
1Q21
CHF million  
Risk-weighted assets at beginning of period  16,589
Asset size 730
Credit quality of counterparties 326
Model and parameter updates (198)
Foreign exchange impact 1,106
Risk-weighted assets at end of period  18,553
CCR RWA under IMM increased CHF 2.0 billion to CHF 18.6 billion compared to the end of 4Q20, driven by the foreign exchange impact and movements in risk levels attributable to asset size and quality, partially offset by decreases related to model and parameter updates. The increases in risk levels were primarily driven by increased secured financing exposures. The decreases related to model and parameter updates were mainly driven by the phase-out of a multiplier on certain corporate exposures and certain portfolio improvements, partially offset by the implementation of a more conservative new model for corporate clients.
6

Market risk
The following table presents the definitions of the RWA flow statements components for market risk.
Definitions of risk-weighted assets movement components related to market risk
Description Definition
RWA as of the end of the previous/current reporting periods  Represents RWA at quarter-end
Regulatory adjustment  Indicates the difference between RWA and RWA (end of day) at beginning and end of period
RWA as of the previous/current quarters end (end of day)    For a given component (e.g., VaR) it refers to the RWA that would be computed if the snapshot
quarter end amount of the component determines the quarter end RWA, as opposed to a 60-day
average for regulatory
Movement in risk levels  Represents movements due to position changes
Model and parameter updates   Represents movements arising from internally driven or externally mandated updates to models
and recalibrations of model parameters specific only to Credit Suisse
Methodology and policy changes    Represents movements arising from externally mandated regulatory methodology and policy
changes to accounting and exposure classification and treatment policies not specific only
to Credit Suisse
Acquisitions and disposals  Represents changes in book sizes due to acquisitions and disposals of entities
Foreign exchange impact  Represents changes in exchange rates of the transaction currencies compared to the Swiss franc
Other  Represents changes that cannot be attributed to any other category
Market risk RWA movements
The following table presents the 1Q21 flow statement explaining variations in the market risk RWA determined under an internal model approach (IMA).
MR2 – Risk-weighted assets flow statements of market risk exposures under an IMA

1Q21
Regulatory
VaR
Stressed
VaR

IRC

Other
1
Total
CHF million  
Risk-weighted assets at beginning of period  3,857 5,666 2,334 4,982 16,839
Regulatory adjustment 755 715 0 328 1,798
Risk-weighted assets at beginning of period (end of day)  4,612 6,381 2,334 5,310 18,637
Movement in risk levels 1,564 2,680 (365) (132) 3,747
Model and parameter updates 145 (273) (58) 0 (186)
Foreign exchange impact 302 420 147 371 1,240
Risk-weighted assets at end of period (end of day)  6,623 9,208 2,058 5,549 23,438
Regulatory adjustment (1,084) (2,498) 0 412 (3,170)
Risk-weighted assets at end of period  5,539 6,710 2,058 5,961 20,268
1
Risks not in VaR (RNIV).
Market risk RWA under an IMA increased 20% to CHF 20.3 billion compared to the end of 4Q20, primarily due to increases in regulatory VaR, stressed VaR and risks not in VaR (RNIV) reflecting an increase in average risk levels.
7

Additional regulatory disclosures
Key prudential metrics
Most line items in the following table reflects the view as if the Group was not a systemically important financial institution.
KM1 - Key metrics
end of 1Q21 4Q20 3Q20 2Q20 1Q20
Capital (CHF million)            
Swiss CET1 capital 36,959 35,351 37,076 37,339 36,305
Fully loaded CECL accounting model Swiss CET1 capital 1 36,959 35,297 37,076 37,339 36,305
Swiss tier 1 capital 53,406 51,192 52,317 51,674 50,798
Fully loaded CECL accounting model Swiss tier 1 capital 1 53,406 51,139 52,317 51,674 50,798
Swiss total eligible capital 54,682 52,426 53,618 54,890 54,036
Fully loaded CECL accounting model Swiss total eligible capital 1 54,682 52,373 53,618 54,890 54,036
Minimum capital requirement (8% of Swiss risk-weighted assets) 2 24,270 22,046 22,869 23,991 24,096
Risk-weighted assets (CHF million)            
Swiss risk-weighted assets 303,380 275,576 285,857 299,893 301,200
Risk-based capital ratios as a percentage of risk-weighted assets (%)            
Swiss CET1 capital ratio 12.2 12.8 13.0 12.5 12.1
Fully loaded CECL accounting model Swiss CET1 capital ratio 1 12.2 12.8 13.0 12.5 12.1
Swiss tier 1 capital ratio 17.6 18.6 18.3 17.2 16.9
Fully loaded CECL accounting model Swiss tier 1 capital ratio 1 17.6 18.6 18.3 17.2 16.9
Swiss total capital ratio 18.0 19.0 18.8 18.3 17.9
Fully loaded CECL accounting model Swiss total capital ratio 1 18.0 19.0 18.8 18.3 17.9
BIS CET1 buffer requirements (%)  3          
Capital conservation buffer 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5 2.5
Extended countercyclical buffer 0.021 0.022 0.022 0.026 0.04
Progressive buffer for G-SIB and/or D-SIB 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0
Total BIS CET1 buffer requirement 3.521 3.522 3.522 3.526 3.54
CET1 capital ratio available after meeting the bank's minimum capital requirements 4 7.7 8.3 8.5 8.0 7.6
Basel III leverage ratio (CHF million)            
Leverage exposure 967,798 799,853 5 824,420 5 836,755 5 869,706 5
Basel III leverage ratio (%) 5.5 6.4 6.3 6.2 5.8
Fully loaded CECL accounting model Basel III leverage ratio (%) 1 5.5 6.4 6.3 6.2 5.8
Liquidity coverage ratio (CHF million)  6          
Numerator: total high-quality liquid assets 211,307 203,536 210,526 202,998 161,668
Denominator: net cash outflows 103,088 107,376 110,882 103,743 88,783
Liquidity coverage ratio (%) 205 190 190 196 182
The new current expected credit loss (CECL) model under US GAAP became effective for Credit Suisse as of January 1, 2020.
1
The fully loaded US GAAP CECL accounting model excludes the transitional relief of recognizing CECL allowances and provisions in CET1 capital in accordance with FINMA Circular 2013/1 “Eligible capital – banks”.
2
Calculated as 8% of Swiss risk-weighted assets, based on total capital minimum requirements, excluding the BIS CET1 buffer requirements.
3
CET1 buffer requirements are based on BIS requirements as a percentage of Swiss risk-weighted assets.
4
Reflects the Swiss CET1 capital ratio, less the BIS minimum CET1 ratio requirement of 4.5%.
5
Reflects the temporary exclusion of central bank deposits in all currencies from the leverage exposure, after adjusting for the dividend paid in 2020, in accordance with FINMA Guidance.
6
Calculated using a three-month average, which is calculated on a daily basis.
> Refer to “Swiss capital requirements” (pages 3 to 4) for the systemically important financial institution view.
> Refer to “Swiss metrics” (pages 54 to 55) and “Risk-weighted assets” (pages 52 to 53) in II – Treasury, risk, balance sheet and off-balance sheet – Capital management in the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21 for further information on movements in capital, capital ratios, risk-weighted assets and leverage ratios.
> Refer to “Liquidity coverage ratio” (page 46) in II – Treasury, risk, balance sheet and off-balance sheet – Liquidity and funding management – Liquidity management in the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21 for further information on movements in liquidity coverage ratio.
> Refer to “Swiss requirements” (page 49) in II – Treasury, risk, balance sheet and off-balance sheet – Capital management – Regulatory framework in the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21 for further information on additional CET1 buffer requirements.
8

The following table provides information about TLAC available and TLAC requirements applied at the resolution group level which is defined as the Credit Suisse Group AG consolidated level.
KM2 - Key metrics - TLAC requirements (at resolution group level)
end of 1Q21 4Q20 3Q20 2Q20 1Q20
CHF million            
TLAC 105,862 93,390 96,820 98,757 93,298
Fully loaded CECL accounting model TLAC 1 105,862 93,336 96,820 98,757 93,298
Swiss risk-weighted assets 303,380 275,576 285,857 299,893 301,200
TLAC ratio (%) 34.9 33.9 33.9 32.9 31.0
Fully loaded CECL accounting model TLAC ratio 1 34.9 33.9 33.9 32.9 31.0
Leverage exposure 967,798 799,853 2 824,420 2 836,755 2 869,706 2
TLAC leverage ratio (%) 10.9 11.7 11.7 11.8 10.7
Fully loaded CECL accounting model TLAC leverage ratio 1 10.9 11.7 11.7 11.8 10.7
Does the subordination exemption in the antepenultimate paragraph of Section 11 of the FSB TLAC Term Sheet apply? No No No No No
Does the subordination exemption in the penultimate paragraph of Section 11 of the FSB TLAC Term Sheet apply? No No No No No
If the capped subordination exemption applies, the amount of funding issued that ranks pari passu with Excluded Liabilities and that is recognized as external TLAC, divided by funding issued that ranks pari passu with Excluded Liabilities and that would be recognized as external TLAC if no cap was applied (%) N/A - refer to our response above N/A - refer to our response above N/A - refer to our response above N/A - refer to our response above N/A - refer to our response above
The new current expected credit loss (CECL) model under US GAAP became effective for Credit Suisse as of January 1, 2020.
1
The fully loaded US GAAP CECL accounting model excludes the transitional relief of recognizing CECL allowances and provisions in CET1 capital in accordance with FINMA Circular 2013/1 “Eligible capital – banks”.
2
Reflects the temporary exclusion of central bank deposits in all currencies from the leverage exposure, after adjusting for the dividend paid in 2020, in accordance with FINMA Guidance.
9

Leverage metrics
Credit Suisse has adopted the BIS leverage ratio framework, as issued by the BCBS and implemented in Switzerland by FINMA.
> Refer to “Leverage metrics” (page 54) and “Swiss metrics” (pages 54 to 55) in II – Treasury, risk, balance sheet and off-balance sheet – Capital management in the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21 for further information on leverage metrics, including the calculation methodology and movements in leverage exposures.
LR1 - Summary comparison of accounting assets vs leverage ratio exposure
end of 1Q21
Reconciliation of consolidated assets to leverage exposure (CHF million)  
Total consolidated assets as per published financial statements 851,395
Adjustment for investments in banking, financial, insurance or commercial entities that are consolidated for accounting purposes but outside the scope of regulatory consolidation   1 (16,896)
Adjustments for derivatives financial instruments 76,027
Adjustments for SFTs (i.e. repos and similar secured lending) (43,306)
Adjustments for off-balance sheet items (i.e. conversion to credit equivalent amounts of off-balance sheet exposures) 98,009
Other adjustments 2,569
Leverage exposure  967,798
1
Includes adjustments for investments in banking, financial, insurance or commercial entities that are consolidated for accounting purposes but outside the scope of regulatory consolidation and tier 1 capital deductions related to balance sheet assets.
LR2 - Leverage ratio common disclosure template
end of 1Q21 4Q20
Reconciliation of consolidated assets to leverage exposure (CHF million)  
On-balance sheet items (excluding derivatives and SFTs, but including collateral) 643,820 511,058 1
Asset amounts deducted from Basel III tier 1 capital (9,678) (9,164)
Total on-balance sheet exposures  634,142 501,894
Reconciliation of consolidated assets to leverage exposure (CHF million)  
Replacement cost associated with all derivatives transactions (i.e. net of eligible cash variation margin) 33,911 31,851
Add-on amounts for PFE associated with all derivatives transactions 76,701 65,545
Gross-up for derivatives collateral provided where deducted from the balance sheet assets pursuant to the operative accounting framework 24,630 26,815
Deductions of receivables assets for cash variation margin provided in derivatives transactions (22,937) (24,352)
Exempted CCP leg of client-cleared trade exposures (12,393) (11,484)
Adjusted effective notional amount of all written credit derivatives 278,256 189,693
Adjusted effective notional offsets and add-on deductions for written credit derivatives (273,208) (183,831)
Derivative Exposures  104,960 94,237
Securities financing transaction exposures (CHF million)  
Gross SFT assets (with no recognition of netting), after adjusting for sale accounting transactions 127,422 110,947
Netted amounts of cash payables and cash receivables of gross SFT assets (9,923) (7,932)
Counterparty credit risk exposure for SFT assets 13,188 11,763
Agent transaction exposures 0 0
Securities financing transaction exposures  130,687 114,778
Other off-balance sheet exposures (CHF million)  
Off-balance sheet exposure at gross notional amount 297,698 276,387
Adjustments for conversion to credit equivalent amounts (199,689) (187,443)
Other off-balance sheet exposures  98,009 88,944
Swiss tier 1 capital (CHF million)  
Swiss tier 1 capital  53,406 51,192
Leverage exposure (CHF million)  
Leverage exposure  967,798 799,853
Leverage ratio (%)  
Basel III leverage ratio  5.5 6.4
1
Reflects the temporary exclusion of central bank deposits in all currencies from the leverage exposure, after adjusting for the dividend paid in 2020, in accordance with FINMA Guidance.
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Liquidity coverage ratio
Our calculation methodology for the liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) is prescribed by FINMA. For disclosure purposes our LCR is calculated using a three-month average which is measured using daily calculations during the quarter.
> Refer to “Liquidity metrics” (pages 45 to 46) and “Funding sources” (page 47) in II –Treasury, risk, balance sheet and off-balance sheet – Liquidity and funding management in the Credit Suisse Financial Report 1Q21 for further information on the Group’s liquidity coverage ratio including high quality liquid assets, liquidity pool and funding sources.
LIQ1 - Liquidity coverage ratio

end of 1Q21
Unweighted
value
1 Weighted
value
2
High-quality liquid assets (CHF million)
High-quality liquid assets 3 211,307
Cash outflows (CHF million)
Retail deposits and deposits from small business customers 162,308 19,959
   of which less stable deposits  162,308 19,959
Unsecured wholesale funding 239,353 88,888
   of which operational deposits (all counterparties) and deposits in networks of cooperative banks  49,507 12,377
   of which non-operational deposits (all counterparties)  119,637 63,062
   of which unsecured debt  13,401 13,401
Secured wholesale funding 44,274
Additional requirements 173,177 36,237
   of which outflows related to derivative exposures and other collateral requirements  67,640 14,733
   of which outflows related to loss of funding on debt products  785 785
   of which credit and liquidity facilities  104,752 20,719
Other contractual funding obligations 50,393 50,393
Other contingent funding obligations 220,738 6,559
Total cash outflows  246,310
Cash inflows (CHF million)
Secured lending 194,901 59,608
Inflows from fully performing exposures 64,869 29,072
Other cash inflows 54,542 54,542
Total cash inflows  314,312 143,222
Liquidity cover ratio (CHF million)
High-quality liquid assets 211,307
Net cash outflows 103,088
Liquidity coverage ratio (%)  205
Calculated based on an average of 65 data points in 1Q21.
1
Calculated as outstanding balances maturing or callable within 30 days.
2
Calculated after the application of haircuts for high-quality liquid assets or inflow and outflow rates.
3
Consists of cash and eligible securities as prescribed by FINMA and reflects a post-cancellation view.
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List of abbreviations
A    
A-IRB Advanced-Internal Ratings-Based Approach
AMA Advanced Measurement Approach
B    
BCBS Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
BIS Bank for International Settlements
C    
CAO Capital Adequacy Ordinance
CCP Central counterparties
CCR Counterparty credit risk
CDS Credit default swap
CECL Current expected credit loss
CET1 Common equity tier 1
D    
D-SIB Domestic systemically important banks
F    
FINMA Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority FINMA
FSB Financial Stability Board
G    
G-SIB Global systemically important banks
I    
IAA Internal Assessment Approach
IMA Internal Models Approach
IMM Internal Models Method
IRB Internal Ratings-Based Approach
IRC Incremental Risk Charge
L    
LCR Liquidity coverage ratio
LRD Leverage ratio denominator
N    
NSFR Net stable funding ratio
P    
PFE Potential future exposure
R    
RNIV Risks not in value-at-risk
RWA Risk-weighted assets
S    
SA Standardized Approach
SA-CCR Standardized Approach - counterparty credit risk
SEC-ERBA Securitization External Ratings-Based Approach
SEC-IRBA Securitization Internal Ratings-Based Approach
SEC-SA Securitization Standardized Approach
SFT Securities Financing Transactions
T    
TLAC Total loss absorbing capacity
U    
US GAAP Accounting principles generally accepted in the US
V    
VaR Value-at-Risk
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Cautionary statement regarding forward-looking information
This document contains statements that constitute forward-looking statements. In addition, in the future we, and others on our behalf, may make statements that constitute forward-looking statements. Such forward-looking statements may include, without limitation, statements relating to the following:
our plans, targets or goals;
our future economic performance or prospects;
the potential effect on our future performance of certain contingencies; and
assumptions underlying any such statements.
Words such as “believes,” “anticipates,” “expects,” “intends” and “plans” and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements but are not the exclusive means of identifying such statements. We do not intend to update these forward-looking statements.
By their very nature, forward-looking statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties, both general and specific, and risks exist that predictions, forecasts, projections and other outcomes described or implied in forward-looking statements will not be achieved. We caution you that a number of important factors could cause results to differ materially from the plans, targets, goals, expectations, estimates and intentions expressed in such forward-looking statements and that the COVID-19 pandemic creates significantly greater uncertainty about forward-looking statements in addition to the factors that generally affect our business. These factors include:
the ability to maintain sufficient liquidity and access capital markets;
market volatility and interest rate fluctuations and developments affecting interest rate levels, including the persistence of a low or negative interest rate environment;
the strength of the global economy in general and the strength of the economies of the countries in which we conduct our operations, in particular the risk of negative impacts of COVID-19 on the global economy and financial markets and the risk of continued slow economic recovery or downturn in the EU, the US or other developed countries or in emerging markets in 2021 and beyond;
the emergence of widespread health emergencies, infectious diseases or pandemics, such as COVID-19, and the actions that may be taken by governmental authorities to contain the outbreak or to counter its impact;
potential risks and uncertainties relating to the severity of impacts from COVID-19 and the duration of the pandemic, including potential material adverse effects on our business, financial condition and results of operations;
the direct and indirect impacts of deterioration or slow recovery in residential and commercial real estate markets;
adverse rating actions by credit rating agencies in respect of us, sovereign issuers, structured credit products or other credit-related exposures;
the ability to achieve our strategic goals, including those related to our targets, ambitions and financial goals;
the ability of counterparties to meet their obligations to us and the adequacy of our allowance for credit losses;
the effects of, and changes in, fiscal, monetary, exchange rate, trade and tax policies;
the effects of currency fluctuations, including the related impact on our business, financial condition and results of operations due to moves in foreign exchange rates;
political, social and environmental developments, including war, civil unrest or terrorist activity and climate change;
the ability to appropriately address social, environmental and sustainability concerns that may arise from our business activities;
the effects of, and the uncertainty arising from, the UK’s withdrawal from the EU;
the possibility of foreign exchange controls, expropriation, nationalization or confiscation of assets in countries in which we conduct our operations;
operational factors such as systems failure, human error, or the failure to implement procedures properly;
the risk of cyber attacks, information or security breaches or technology failures on our reputation, business or operations, the risk of which is increased while large portions of our employees work remotely;
the adverse resolution of litigation, regulatory proceedings and other contingencies;
actions taken by regulators with respect to our business and practices and possible resulting changes to our business organization, practices and policies in countries in which we conduct our operations;
the effects of changes in laws, regulations or accounting or tax standards, policies or practices in countries in which we conduct our operations;
the expected discontinuation of LIBOR and other interbank offered rates and the transition to alternative reference rates;
the potential effects of changes in our legal entity structure;
competition or changes in our competitive position in geographic and business areas in which we conduct our operations;
the ability to retain and recruit qualified personnel;
the ability to maintain our reputation and promote our brand;
the ability to increase market share and control expenses;
technological changes instituted by us, our counterparties or competitors;
the timely development and acceptance of our new products and services and the perceived overall value of these products and services by users;
acquisitions, including the ability to integrate acquired businesses successfully, and divestitures, including the ability to sell non-core assets; and
other unforeseen or unexpected events and our success at managing these and the risks involved in the foregoing.
We caution you that the foregoing list of important factors is not exclusive. When evaluating forward-looking statements, you should carefully consider the foregoing factors and other uncertainties and events, including the information set forth in “Risk factors” in I  – Information on the company in our Annual Report 2020 and in “Risk factor” in I –Credit Suisse results – Credit Suisse in our 1Q21 Financial Report.
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