The central bank of Switzerland, responsible for monetary policy and managing the Swiss franc (CHF), known for safe-haven currency management and historical interventions in forex markets.
What Is the SNB?
The Swiss National Bank (SNB) conducts monetary policy for Switzerland with the primary goal of ensuring price stability while taking due account of economic developments. The SNB sets the SNB policy rate and meets quarterly (4 times per year, fewer than most major Central Bank institutions). It is unique among major central banks as a publicly traded company listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange.
SNB and CHF Markets
The Swiss franc is a major safe-haven currency, strengthening during periods of global risk aversion. EUR/CHF and USD/CHF are the primary pairs affected by SNB decisions. The SNB has historically intervened directly in forex markets to prevent excessive CHF appreciation, which hurts Swiss exporters. The most dramatic event was January 2015, when the SNB suddenly removed the EUR/CHF 1.2000 floor, causing CHF to surge over 30% in minutes.
Policy Approach
The SNB has used negative Interest Rate policy, direct forex intervention, and Forward Guidance to manage CHF. Its willingness to intervene makes CHF pairs uniquely sensitive to SNB rhetoric. Traders watch for language about "the franc being highly valued" as a signal that intervention risk is elevated.
Related Terms
Interest Rate
The cost of borrowing money, set by central banks as a primary monetary policy tool. Interest rate differentials between countries are the dominant driver of forex exchange rates.
Central Bank
A national or supranational institution responsible for managing a country's monetary policy, controlling the money supply, setting interest rates, and maintaining financial stability.
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