“Foreign investors may wonder if Switzerland is a banana republic where the rule of law doesn’t apply,” said Peter V. Kunz, a professor specialized in economic law at the University of Bern. The country “is not endangered, but there might be the risk of lawsuits” because authorities “intervened here on very thin ice.”
Kern Alexander, a professor of law and finance at the University of Zurich, agreed, saying crisis management was carried out in a “panicked” way that “undermined the rule of law and undermined Switzerland.”
In announcing the government-brokered sale of Credit Suisse to its Zurich rival on Sunday evening, the Swiss government cited an article of its constitution that allows it to issue temporary ordinances “to counter existing or imminent threats of serious disruption to public order or internal or external security.” In this case, this included overriding merger laws on shareholder votes.