The China Mail - How Swiss Stocks tamed Prices

USD -
AED 3.672502
AFN 65.499624
ALL 83.268
AMD 380.541304
ANG 1.79008
AOA 918.000323
ARS 1442.0063
AUD 1.491903
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.702988
BAM 1.684996
BBD 2.018161
BDT 122.553771
BGN 1.67937
BHD 0.377034
BIF 2966.361251
BMD 1
BND 1.290239
BOB 6.92418
BRL 5.375991
BSD 1.002059
BTN 90.539021
BWP 13.380603
BYN 2.914595
BYR 19600
BZD 2.015318
CAD 1.38939
CDF 2205.000281
CHF 0.802185
CLF 0.022509
CLP 883.009886
CNY 6.966404
CNH 6.966075
COP 3685.86
CRC 495.728926
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.99748
CZK 20.92195
DJF 178.43389
DKK 6.434905
DOP 63.908884
DZD 130.277014
EGP 47.236397
ERN 15
ETB 155.883141
EUR 0.86121
FJD 2.279498
FKP 0.74706
GBP 0.74655
GEL 2.695018
GGP 0.74706
GHS 10.826947
GIP 0.74706
GMD 73.494723
GNF 8772.179217
GTQ 7.683195
GYD 209.638025
HKD 7.799635
HNL 26.425953
HRK 6.489038
HTG 131.289765
HUF 332.308007
IDR 16916.25
ILS 3.135125
IMP 0.74706
INR 90.78385
IQD 1312.639192
IRR 42125.000158
ISK 125.909855
JEP 0.74706
JMD 157.980891
JOD 0.709003
JPY 158.117042
KES 129.050069
KGS 87.448896
KHR 4029.412905
KMF 424.000082
KPW 900.008925
KRW 1472.000149
KWD 0.30809
KYD 0.835003
KZT 511.994762
LAK 21669.40205
LBP 89732.49132
LKR 310.076117
LRD 180.362966
LSL 16.401098
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.444943
MAD 9.239133
MDL 17.144605
MGA 4652.32487
MKD 53.004857
MMK 2099.811473
MNT 3562.208717
MOP 8.04978
MRU 39.790129
MUR 46.302894
MVR 15.450081
MWK 1737.197601
MXN 17.655705
MYR 4.059496
MZN 63.909742
NAD 16.401098
NGN 1423.309868
NIO 36.873823
NOK 10.09714
NPR 144.862434
NZD 1.735555
OMR 0.384503
PAB 1.002055
PEN 3.366632
PGK 4.279259
PHP 59.341985
PKR 280.420174
PLN 3.631305
PYG 6767.409603
QAR 3.663604
RON 4.384501
RSD 101.080973
RUB 77.803681
RWF 1461.002318
SAR 3.749973
SBD 8.130216
SCR 13.599625
SDG 601.000259
SEK 9.23346
SGD 1.28785
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.125047
SLL 20969.499267
SOS 571.63288
SRD 38.259846
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.107679
SVC 8.767872
SYP 11059.574895
SZL 16.394276
THB 31.349712
TJS 9.333902
TMT 3.5
TND 2.936121
TOP 2.40776
TRY 43.2784
TTD 6.801842
TWD 31.574799
TZS 2517.494956
UAH 43.583669
UGX 3557.290119
UYU 38.691668
UZS 12026.207984
VES 338.72555
VND 26280
VUV 121.060293
WST 2.785521
XAF 565.134271
XAG 0.010899
XAU 0.000217
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.805956
XDR 0.702846
XOF 565.134271
XPF 102.747014
YER 238.424977
ZAR 16.379835
ZMK 9001.205007
ZMW 19.815458
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    2.6800

    84.04

    +3.19%

  • CMSC

    0.1500

    23.55

    +0.64%

  • CMSD

    0.0719

    23.98

    +0.3%

  • BCC

    2.2200

    86.27

    +2.57%

  • NGG

    0.4800

    79.36

    +0.6%

  • GSK

    -1.6700

    49.12

    -3.4%

  • AZN

    -2.3500

    93.99

    -2.5%

  • RELX

    -0.0700

    41.85

    -0.17%

  • RIO

    0.4700

    86.35

    +0.54%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    17.03

    -0.06%

  • BCE

    0.0200

    24.24

    +0.08%

  • JRI

    -0.0865

    13.54

    -0.64%

  • BTI

    0.6400

    58.08

    +1.1%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    13.45

    +0.59%

  • BP

    -0.6700

    35.15

    -1.91%


How Swiss Stocks tamed Prices




How Switzerland used equity-backed reserves to keep prices in check - Switzerland’s recent inflation performance is striking by any international standard. While much of the developed world grappled with price rises far above target, Swiss consumer-price inflation has been brought back to muted rates and, at times, hovered close to zero. The country did not stumble upon a miracle cure. Rather, it relied on an institutional playbook that blends a credible inflation target, a strong and freely moving currency—and, crucially, a uniquely structured central‑bank balance sheet in which roughly a quarter of foreign‑exchange reserves is invested in global equities.

At the heart of the Swiss approach lies the exchange‑rate channel. For more than a decade the Swiss National Bank (SNB) accumulated very large foreign‑currency reserves to manage excessive upward pressure on the franc. Those reserves are diversified across currencies and asset classes, with a deliberately significant allocation to equities managed on a passive, market‑neutral basis. Building a portfolio that earns an equity risk premium over time was not an end in itself; it was a way to improve the risk‑return profile of the reserves while maintaining ample firepower for currency operations.

That firepower proved pivotal when global energy and goods prices surged. In 2022 and 2023 the SNB shifted stance and used its reserves in the opposite direction—selling foreign currency to allow a measured appreciation of the franc. A stronger franc lowers the local‑currency price of imported goods and services, damping inflation via “imported disinflation”. Because the reserves had been amassed in earlier years, and because a sizeable slice was in equities that tended to deliver solid returns over time, the central bank could act decisively without jeopardising balance‑sheet resilience.

The portfolio structure also matters for confidence. An equity share—held broadly across markets and sectors, with exclusions on ethical grounds and with no investments in Swiss companies—signals that the reserves are not a dormant hoard but a well‑diversified buffer aligned with long‑run value preservation. When equity markets rose strongly in 2024, gains on those holdings (alongside gold and currency effects) replenished the central bank’s financial buffers. That, in turn, reinforced the credibility of policy at precisely the moment when keeping inflation expectations anchored was most important.

None of this should be mistaken for the SNB “using the stock market” as its primary inflation tool. Monetary policy still rests on an explicit price‑stability objective, a conditional inflation forecast and the policy rate. Indeed, as inflation returned to the target range, the policy rate could be reduced again in 2024–2025. But the equity‑backed reserves shaped the backdrop: they made it easier to tighten monetary conditions through the exchange rate when prices were accelerating, and they underpinned confidence in subsequent easing once inflation receded.

Switzerland’s low and recently near‑zero inflation cannot be ascribed to reserves alone. The country’s energy mix and regulated price components dampened the direct pass‑through from global fuel shocks; the consumption basket assigns a smaller weight to energy than in many peers; and the franc’s safe‑haven status consistently mutes imported price pressures. What distinguishes the Swiss case is how these structural features were complemented by an ample, well‑diversified reserve portfolio—including global equities—that allowed timely foreign‑exchange operations without calling market confidence into question.

The lesson is not that every central bank should load up on shares. Institutional mandates, legal frameworks, market depth and exchange‑rate regimes differ widely. Rather, Switzerland shows that, for a small open economy with a safe‑haven currency, a disciplined, transparent reserve strategy—one that tolerates equity exposure while avoiding conflicts of interest at home—can support the nimble use of the exchange‑rate channel. In the inflation shock of recent years, that combination helped bring prices back under control.

As of late summer 2025, Switzerland’s inflation remains subdued and close to the midpoint of its price‑stability range. The franc is firm, policy is data‑driven, and the central bank’s balance sheet—anchored by highly liquid bonds and a passive equity allocation—retains the flexibility to lean against renewed price pressures or, if conditions warrant, to cushion the economy. Switzerland did not “magic away” inflation by buying shares; it designed a balance sheet that could do its day job when it mattered.