Lead paragraph
The Swiss National Bank (SNB) signalled renewed willingness to deploy negative interest rates if necessary, comments from Chairman published on Mar 24, 2026 confirmed (InvestingLive, Mar 24, 2026). The statement emphasized the policy rate as the primary instrument for domestic price stability while acknowledging that foreign-exchange intervention can be preferable "in some situations," a notable reiteration of operational flexibility in the SNB toolkit. The chairman noted that the hurdle for returning to negative territory is high, referencing past experience with negative rates and their side effects—a historical benchmark that traces back to the SNB's January 2015 deposit rate decision at -0.75% (SNB historical release, Jan 2015). Markets reacted with limited immediate currency moves; the Swiss franc pair referenced in market coverage bounced after earlier weakness, having hit its lowest level since 2015 prior to the remarks (InvestingLive, Mar 24, 2026). These comments recalibrate expectations for policymakers, FX desks and fixed-income investors who have been assessing the interplay between interest-rate differentials and capital flows into the safe-haven franc.
Context
The chairman's remarks on Mar 24, 2026 arrive against a backdrop of unsteady global monetary policy convergence and persistent currency volatility. Since the SNB's 2015 decision to adopt a negative deposit rate of -0.75%, Swiss policy has oscillated between unconventional and conventional measures; that historical episode remains the primary empirical reference when market participants discuss negative-rate re-entry (SNB, Jan 2015). The SNB has also repeatedly emphasised that its policy objectives remain price stability and exchange-rate considerations where relevant — a stance that was underscored by the recent assertion that FX intervention may be more suitable than rate cuts in certain scenarios (InvestingLive, Mar 24, 2026).
For global investors, negative-rate readiness from the SNB changes relative value calculations across sovereign bonds and cross-currency basis trades. The Swiss franc has historically acted as a countercyclical asset; the pair that hit the lowest level since 2015 earlier this month later bounced, illustrating heightened two-way risk and short-term sensitivity to messaging from the SNB (InvestingLive, Mar 24, 2026). This environment complicates carry strategies, swap hedging costs and the valuation of Swiss fixed-income assets relative to peers such as German Bunds and U.S. Treasuries where policy paths have diverged.
Policy signalling matters as much as policy itself. The chairman's emphasis on a high hurdle for negative rates is a deliberate attempt to limit market overreaction while preserving optionality. Such calibrated communication aims to blunt volatility spikes while keeping the SNB's response space open in case unanticipated shocks to the exchange rate or domestic inflation materialise.
Data Deep Dive
Three discrete data points anchor the current debate. First, the chairman's comments were published on Mar 24, 2026 and explicitly referenced negative-rate readiness (InvestingLive, Mar 24, 2026). Second, the Swiss franc pair referenced in coverage reached its lowest level since 2015 prior to the comments, a multi-year trough that market participants watched closely for policy implications (InvestingLive, Mar 24, 2026). Third, the SNB's historical use of negative deposit rates began in January 2015 with a -0.75% rate, a concrete numerical precedent for both market pricing and regulatory assessment (SNB historical release, Jan 2015).
Quantitatively, interest-rate differentials are the principal driver the chairman highlighted; spreads between Swiss short-term rates and those of the Federal Reserve or the European Central Bank materially influence CHF flows. While the SNB did not publish new macro forecasts in the remarks, the combination of higher policy rates abroad and domestic disinflationary pressures increases the probability that FX mechanics, rather than pure rate cuts, will be decisive in near-term outcomes. Historical episodes show that when Swiss short-term rates moved relatively more negative, cross-border deposit flows and bank margins were affected — an empirical channel that remains salient but was noted by the chairman as a reason to maintain a high activation threshold for negative rates.
Market pricing since the statement has reflected a modest repricing of tail risk rather than a wholesale repositioning. Option-implied volatilities on CHF crosses ticked higher intraday of the commentary but remain below crisis levels; the immediate market response suggests participants view the announcement as an expansion of the SNB toolkit rather than a change of regime. Traders and sovereign desks will monitor follow-through: any observable change in SNB balance-sheet operations or explicit mention of intervention thresholds would constitute new data points for repricing.
Sector Implications
Banks: Swiss retail and wholesale banks historically faced margin compression under negative-rate regimes due to deposit repricing resistance and the cost of negative pass-through. The chairman’s nod to the downside costs of negative rates signals that financial stability considerations remain central to the SNB’s calculus. Lenders and asset managers will therefore continue stress-testing scenarios that include limited negative-rate exposure, concentration risk in FX-hedged portfolios and funding-cost shocks during episodes of intense franc appreciation.
Foreign exchange markets: FX desks will reassess liquidity provisioning across CHF pairs. A calibrated SNB that prefers FX intervention in certain contexts implies potential large-scale market operations rather than discrete policy-rate adjustments. Intervention introduces a different liquidity profile and potential for abrupt order flow; historical interventions by the SNB have been episodic and substantial, and market participants will price the asymmetric risk of sudden intervention alongside interest-rate path risk.
Fixed income and sovereigns: Negative-rate optionality affects the relative attractiveness of Swiss short-dated sovereign paper versus EUR and USD equivalents. If the SNB were to move rates negative, the cross-currency basis and covered-interest parity conditions would adjust, with implications for cross-border funding strategies. Pension funds and insurers that rely on Swiss yields to hedge liabilities will need updated scenario analysis for both yield curve and spread dynamics.
Risk Assessment
Operational risk for the SNB rises when unconventional tools are back on the table. Negative rates come with documented side effects on bank profitability, savings behaviour and asset valuations; the chairman explicitly acknowledged these trade-offs when reiterating the high hurdle for negative-rate activation (InvestingLive, Mar 24, 2026). Additionally, FX intervention as an alternative carries its own risk: large-scale interventions can rapidly change the SNB's balance sheet composition and require coordination with domestic financial stability authorities.
Market risk centres on regime uncertainty. The combination of a high stated hurdle and readiness to act creates a pivot condition: markets must weigh the low probability but high-impact scenario of renewed negative rates against the more likely incremental interventions in FX markets. This creates two-way volatility where defensive positioning — hedging of CHF exposures and monitoring option skews — is prudent for institutional investors seeking to quantify tail risks.
Geopolitical and spillover risks also deserve attention. Divergent policy paths across major central banks affect capital flows into safe havens; should the Fed or ECB surprise relative to current expectations, the SNB could face sharper exchange-rate moves that test its operational comfort with either negative rates or interventions. The SNB’s public messaging is therefore a key stabiliser, but it is not a substitute for market contingency planning.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Our view at Fazen Capital is that the chairman’s statement was intentionally calibrated to preserve maximum optionality while avoiding a sharp market repricing. Rather than a signal that negative rates are imminent, the emphasis on a high hurdle and operational preference for FX intervention suggests a policy stance focused on toolkit flexibility. Contrarian scenarios worth modelling include a short but intense bout of franc strength triggered by global risk-off conditions that forces the SNB into temporary intervention without rate changes, and a longer-duration scenario where a sustained disinflationary shock increases the marginal appeal of a modestly negative rate.
We believe institutional investors should reframe scenario analyses away from a binary "negative rates yes/no" framework toward a matrix that includes (1) targeted FX intervention with limited balance-sheet expansion, (2) temporary low-probability negative-rate shocks similar in magnitude to the -0.75% precedent (Jan 2015) and (3) asymmetric market responses where option-volatility spikes precede realized exchange-rate moves. This approach better captures the operational nuances the SNB has signalled and aligns risk capital allocation with plausible outcomes rather than headline-driven narratives.
For further reading on how central-bank signalling alters cross-asset dynamics, Fazen research on [monetary policy](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) provides framework tools for modelling conditional scenarios and stress testing portfolios under intervention-led episodes. Investors may also consult our work on FX intervention mechanics for operational insights at [monetary policy](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Outlook
In the near term, expect volatility to remain the key metric rather than a steady directional move in the franc. The chairman’s statement reduces the probability of an immediate negative-rate decision while making it clear that the SNB will not rule out any instrument, which supports a higher baseline for two-way CHF volatility. Macro releases, global risk sentiment and policy moves from the Fed and ECB will be the primary external catalysts that could force the SNB’s hand in either direction.
Over a 6-12 month horizon, the governance of policy — i.e., the SNB's willingness to intervene in FX versus move policy rates — will determine the balance between transient market operations and more persistent monetary accommodation. Institutional players should monitor three leading indicators: SNB balance-sheet expansion patterns, option-implied skew on CHF crosses, and developments in Swiss domestic inflation relative to the SNB's target. A sustained divergence between Swiss inflation and peer inflation rates would raise the likelihood of substantive policy action beyond verbal guidance.
Finally, liquidity management and hedging strategies should assume that the SNB keeps negative-rate re-introduction as a credible but conditional tool. That implies preparing for scenarios with rapid, targeted intervention rather than a protracted negative-rate environment — not because rates cannot return to negative territory, but because the SNB has signalled a measured preference for FX operations when dislocations are exchange-rate driven.
FAQ
Q: What specific benchmark from the past did the chairman reference regarding negative rates? How should investors interpret that precedent?
A: The most concrete historical benchmark is the SNB's January 2015 adoption of a -0.75% deposit rate, which remains the primary empirical reference for negative-rate policy in Switzerland (SNB, Jan 2015). Investors should interpret that precedent as evidence that the SNB has operational experience with negative rates and with the side effects they generate, but the chairman’s emphasis on a high hurdle signals that any repeat would be tightly conditional and informed by lessons from that episode.
Q: Could the SNB prefer FX intervention to negative rates in practice, and what would that look like?
A: Yes — the chairman explicitly identified FX intervention as sometimes more suitable (InvestingLive, Mar 24, 2026). Practically, intervention would likely involve direct FX purchases or sales and could be sizable and episodic, altering SNB balance-sheet composition quickly. Such interventions typically aim to smooth disorderly conditions rather than permanently alter price levels; therefore, market participants should expect potential short, sharp operations rather than gradual, predictable interventions.
Bottom Line
The SNB has reasserted optionality: negative rates remain possible but are a high-threshold tool, with FX intervention presented as a contextual alternative (InvestingLive, Mar 24, 2026). Market participants should prepare for elevated two-way CHF volatility and model outcomes across intervention and modest negative-rate scenarios.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
