Credit Suisse Group AG
Articles of Association of Credit Suisse Group AG
Version of December 7, 2022
I. Corporate name, registered office, duration and purpose
Art. 1 Corporate name, registered office and duration
A stock corporation under the name Credit Suisse Group AG (Credit Suisse Group SA)
(Credit Suisse Group Ltd.) (the “Company”) is established with its registered office
in Zurich, Switzerland. Its duration is unlimited.
1 The purpose of the Company is to hold direct or indirect interests in all types of
businesses in Switzerland and abroad, in particular in the areas of banking, finance,
asset management and insurance. The Company has the power to establish new businesses,
acquire a majority or minority interest in existing businesses and provide related
financing.
2 The Company has the power to acquire, mortgage and sell real estate properties, both
in Switzerland and abroad.
II. Share capital and shares
Art. 3 Share capital and shares
1 The fully paid-in share capital amounts to CHF 160,086,322.48 and is divided into 4,002,158,062 registered shares with a par value
of CHF 0.04 each.
2 Upon a resolution being passed by the Shareholders’ Meeting, registered shares may
be converted into bearer shares.
3 The Company may issue its shares in the form of single certificates, global certificates
or uncertificated securities. The Company may convert the shares it issued in one form
into another form at any time and without the approval of shareholders. Shareholders
have no right to demand that issued shares be converted into another form. Shareholders may,
however, at any time request that the Company issue a certificate for the registered
shares that they hold according to the Share Register.
4 The Company recognizes only one representative for each share.
Art. 4 Share Register and transfer of shares
1 The Company recognizes as a shareholder the person whose name is entered in the Share
Register.
2 A person who has acquired registered shares will, upon application, be entered without
limitation in the Share Register as having voting rights provided that he or she expressly
states that he or she has acquired the shares concerned in his or her own name for his or
her own account.
3 Any person not expressly stating in his or her application for registration that the
shares concerned have been acquired for his or her own account (hereinafter “nominees”) may
be entered for a maximum of 2% of the total outstanding share capital with voting rights
in the Share Register. In excess of this limit, registered shares held by a nominee will
only be granted voting rights if such nominee declares in writing that he or she is prepared to disclose
the name, address and shareholding of any person for whose account he or she is holding 0.5% or more of the outstanding share capital. Art.10, Section 2 shall apply correspondingly
to nominees who are related to one another through capital ownership or voting rights or have a common management or are otherwise interrelated.
4 The transfer restrictions apply regardless of the way and the form in which the registered
shares are kept in the accounts, and regardless of the provisions applicable to transfers.
5 The transfer of intermediated securities based on the Company’s shares, and the pledging of these intermediated securities as collateral, shall be based on the provisions of
the Swiss Federal Intermediated Securities Act. Transfer or pledging as collateral
by means of written assignment are not permitted.
6 The Board of Directors will issue the necessary directives to ensure that the aforementioned
provisions are complied with.
The Company may issue bonds, with or without security, including warrants and convertible
issues, and may guarantee such issues by its subsidiaries.
IV. The governing bodies of the Company
Art. 6 The governing bodies of the Company shall be the following:
1. The General Meeting of Shareholders (“Shareholders’ Meeting”);
2. The Board of Directors;
3. The Executive Board;
4. The Independent Auditors.
1. The Shareholders’ Meeting
Art. 7 Authority and duty to call a Shareholders’ Meeting
1 The Shareholders’ Meeting shall ordinarily be called by the Board of Directors.
2 The ordinary Shareholders’ Meeting shall take place annually within six months after
the close of the business year.
3 Extraordinary Shareholders’ Meetings shall take place as necessary. One or more shareholders
whose combined holdings represent at least 10 percent of the share capital can also
request that a Shareholders’ Meeting be called.
4 Shareholders representing shares with a par value of CHF 40,000 may require that a
particular item appear on the agenda of the Shareholders’ Meeting.
5 The request to call a Shareholders’ Meeting must be submitted in writing and at the
same time shares of the Company representing at least 10 percent of the share capital are
to be deposited. The request to include a particular item on the agenda of the Shareholders’
Meeting, together with the relevant proposals, must be submitted in writing and at the same
time shares of the Company with a par value of at least CHF 40,000 are to be deposited for safekeeping.
The shares are to remain in safekeeping until the day after the Shareholders’ Meeting.
6 The request to include a particular item on the agenda, together with the relevant
proposals, must be submitted to the Board of Directors not later than 45 days before
the date of the Shareholders’ Meeting.
The Shareholders’ Meeting has the following powers which may not be delegated:
1. amending the Articles of Association;
2. electing the Members of the Board of Directors, the Chairperson, and the Members of
the Compensation Committee. Art. 15, Section 3 and Art. 20a, Section 3 shall be reserved;
3. electing the independent proxy. Art. 14a, Section 2 shall be reserved;
4. electing the Independent Auditors and Special Auditors;
5. approving the management report, the consolidated financial statements and the annual
statutory financial statements;
6. determining the allocation of the disposable profit;
7. formally discharging the actions of the Members of the Board of Directors and the
Executive Board;
8. approving the compensation of the Board of Directors and the Executive Board; and
9. passing resolutions on all matters which have been reserved to its authority by law
or by these Articles of Association or which have been submitted to the Shareholders’
Meeting by the Board of Directors.
Art. 8a Approval of the compensation of the Board of Directors
1 The Shareholders’ Meeting approves on an annual basis the compensation of the Board
of Directors in advance for the period up until the next ordinary Shareholders’ Meeting.
2 The compensation may be paid partly in the form of participation rights in the Company.
If so, the Board of Directors shall determine the conditions, including any disposal
restrictions.
3 Members of the Board of Directors may also be paid compensation from other Group companies
as long as this is included in the approved compensation as per Section 1.
4 If the Shareholders’ Meeting refuses to approve the proposal of the Board of Directors
pursuant to Section 1, the Board of Directors may submit a new proposal to a subsequent
extraordinary Shareholders’ Meeting or to the next ordinary Shareholders’ Meeting.
Art. 8b Approval of the compensation of the Executive Board
1 The Shareholders’ Meeting approves on an annual basis the compensation of the Executive
Board as a maximum amount or as maximum partial amounts in advance or retroactively for the period described in the proposal of the Board of Directors.
2 Insofar as the compensation is approved in advance, the Shareholders’ Meeting shall
in addition hold an advisory vote on the compensation report for this period.
3 The compensation consists of a fixed component and a variable component. The variable
component comprises both short-term incentive compensation elements (which may contain
deferred compensation elements with a qualifying period of up to three years from
the date of grant) and long-term incentive compensation elements (which may contain deferred compensation elements with a longer qualifying period of at least three years from
the date of grant). The variable component is dependent upon the attainment of individual and
collective, short-term and long-term performance targets, which the Board of Directors sets on
a regular basis.
4 The compensation may be paid partly in the form of participation rights in the Company
or in the form of derivatives based on such participation rights or other financial
instruments.
5 Conditional and deferred compensation components should be factored into the compensation
at their fair value at date of grant. The Board of Directors determines grant, vesting,
blocking, exercise and forfeiture conditions; they may provide for continuation, acceleration
or removal of vesting and exercise conditions, for payment or grant of compensation
assuming target achievement or for forfeiture in the event of pre-determined events
such as a termination of an employment or mandate agreement.
6 Members of the Executive Board may also receive compensation from other Group companies
as long as this is included in the approved compensation as per Section 1.
7 If the Shareholders’ Meeting refuses to approve the proposal of the Board of Directors
pursuant to Section 1, the Board of Directors may submit a new proposal for approval to a subsequent
extraordinary Shareholders’ Meeting or to the next ordinary Shareholders’ Meeting.
Art. 8c Reserve for changes to the Executive Board
1 If the Shareholders’ Meeting has approved in advance a maximum amount for the full
or partial compensation of the Executive Board, the Company may use an additional maximum 30% of this amount per compensation period during the relevant compensation periods for the
full or partial compensation of persons who have been newly appointed to the Executive Board
or promoted within the Executive Board.
2 The additional amount may only be used if the compensation of the Executive Board
approved by the Shareholders’ Meeting in advance proves insufficient for the compensation
of the new or promoted Members in the period until the next vote of the Shareholders’
Meeting.
3 Where the payment of compensation is concerned, the other provisions of the Articles
of Association apply mutatis mutandis.
Art. 9 Notice of Shareholders’ Meetings
1 Notice of the Shareholders’ Meeting must be given at least 20 days before the Shareholders’
Meeting takes place. Notice of the meeting is to be published in the Swiss Gazette
of Commerce (Schweizerisches Handelsamtsblatt).
2 The notice of the meeting must include the items on the agenda, the proposals submitted by the Board of Directors and by shareholders who have required
that a meeting be held or that a particular item be included on the agenda.
3 No resolutions can be passed on proposals of which due notice has not been given,
with the exception of those concerning the calling of an extraordinary Shareholders’
Meeting or the carrying out of a special audit.
1 Subject to the provisions of Art. 4, Section 3 every share carries one vote at the
Shareholders’ Meeting. However, except as set out in Sections 3-5 below, the shares for which a single shareholder
can directly or indirectly exercise voting rights for his or her own shares or as a proxy may not exceed 2 percent of the total outstanding share capital.
2 For the purposes of the restrictions on voting rights as laid down in Section 1 above,
legal entities, partnerships or groups of joint owners or other groups in which individuals
or legal entities are related to one another through capital ownership or voting rights or
have a common management or are otherwise interrelated shall be regarded as being a single
shareholder. The same shall apply to individuals, legal entities or partnerships that
act in concert (especially as a syndicate) with intent to evade the limitation on voting
rights.
3 The restrictions on voting rights do not apply to the exercise of voting rights by
the independent proxy; for the instructing shareholders Section 1 and Section 2 remain
reserved.
4 Nor do the restrictions on voting rights apply to shares in respect of which the shareholder
confirms to the Company in the application for registration that he or she has acquired
the shares in his or her name for his or her own account and in respect of which the
disclosure requirement set out in Section 6 below has been satisfied.
5 In addition, the restrictions on voting rights do not apply to shares which are registered
in the name of a nominee, provided that this nominee furnishes the Company with the
name, address and shareholding of the person(s) (as per definition in Section 2 above)
for whose account he or she holds 0.5 percent or more of the total share capital outstanding
at the time and for which he or she (or the beneficial owner, as appropriate) has
satisfied the disclosure requirement set out in section 6 below. The Board of Directors
has the right to conclude agreements with nominees concerning both their disclosure
requirement and the exercise of voting rights.
6 The disclosure obligation must be discharged in accordance with Art. 120 of the Federal
Act on Financial Market Infrastructures and Market Conduct in Securities and Derivatives
Trading of 19 June 2015 and the relevant ordinances and regulations.
7 The Board of Directors shall issue regulations regarding the proof of share ownership
which is necessary in order to obtain voting cards.
Art. 11 Chairperson, tellers, minutes taker
1 The Chairperson of the Board of Directors shall chair the Shareholders’ Meeting; in
his or her absence, a Vice-Chairperson or another member designated by the Board of
Directors take the chair.
2 The Shareholders’ Meeting shall elect by a show of hands the tellers to count the
votes at the meeting. Members of the Board of Directors, the Independent Auditors
and employees of the Company shall not be eligible to act as tellers.
3 The Board of Directors shall nominate a secretary to take the minutes.
1 The Shareholders’ Meeting may in principle pass resolutions without regard to the
number of shareholders present at the Shareholders’ Meeting or represented by proxy.
2 Representation of at least half of the share capital is required for:
■ conversion of registered shares into bearer shares;
■ amendments to Art. 4, Section 3
■ amendments to Art. 10, Sections 1-6
■ dissolution of the Company.
3 This Article is subject to the mandatory provisions of the law and other provisions
of these articles of association.
Art. 13 Resolutions/required majorities
1 Resolutions and elections by the Shareholders’ Meeting require the approval of an
absolute majority of the votes represented at the Shareholders’ Meeting, except as
otherwise prescribed by mandatory provisions of law or by other provisions of these
articles of association. In the case of an equality of votes, elections and resolutions
shall be decided by the casting vote of the person chairing the Shareholders’ Meeting.
2 The conversion of registered shares into bearer shares, the dissolution of the Company
and amendments to Art. 4, Section 3 of these articles of association require the approval
of at least three-quarters of the votes cast. Amendments to Art. 10, Sections 1-6
require the approval of at least seven-eighths of the votes cast.
3 The Chairperson may allow elections and ballots to be conducted by a show of hands,
by written ballot or by electronic means. He or she has all the powers required to
conduct the Shareholders’ Meeting in an orderly fashion.
The person chairing the Shareholders’ Meeting and the minutes taker of the Shareholders’
Meeting are to sign the minutes of the Shareholders’ Meeting.
Art. 14a Independent proxy
1 The independent proxy is elected by the Shareholders’ Meeting for a term of office
lasting until the close of the next ordinary Shareholders’ Meeting.
2 Should the office of the independent proxy become vacant, the Board of Directors shall
appoint a replacement for the next Shareholders’ Meeting.
3 Individual persons as well as legal entities or partnerships may stand for election;
they shall also be eligible for re-election.
4 The Board of Directors shall regulate the electronic submission of power of attorney
and instructions to the independent proxy.
2. The Board of Directors
Art. 15 Election and term of office
1 The Board of Directors shall consist of a minimum of seven Members.
2 The Chairperson and the other Members of the Board of Directors are elected individually
by the Shareholders’ Meeting for a term lasting until the close of the next ordinary
Shareholders’ Meeting; they shall also be eligible for re-election.
3 Should the office of the Chairperson become vacant, the Board of Directors shall from among its Members appoint a replacement for the remaining term of office.
Art. 16 Powers and responsibilities
1 The Board of Directors shall decide on all matters which have not been reserved for or
conferred on another governing body of the Company by law by these articles of association
or by other regulations.
2 The Board of Directors determines those who have signatory power and the nature of
the signatory power required. A document signed on behalf of the Company is binding
on the Company only when it carries the signatures of two authorized signatories.
Art. 17 Delegation of powers
The Board of Directors may delegate the management of the Company wholly or partly
to committees of the Board of Directors, individual Members of the Board or to other
natural persons, in accordance with the regulations governing the conduct of business
of the Company, as long as this delegation of powers does not conflict with any mandatory statutory provisions.
Art. 18 Quorum/required majorities
1 A majority of the Members of the Board of Directors must be present in order to pass
resolutions; there is no presence quorum requirement for resolutions on authorized
capital increases, for resolutions on amendments and acknowledgements by the Board of Directors
in connection with capital increases, or for the acknowledgement of an event triggering
conversion of the conversion capital. For resolutions carried out by circular letter, a majority of the Members of the Board of Directors must cast their votes.
2 Resolutions of the Board of Directors require the approval of an absolute majority
of the votes cast. In the case of an equality of votes, decisions shall be determined
by the casting vote of the person chairing the meeting.
Minutes shall be kept of the proceedings and resolutions of the Board of Directors.
The minutes shall be signed by the person chairing the meeting and the secretary.
Art. 20 Compensation-related tasks of the Board of Directors
1 The Board of Directors shall submit the compensation of the Board of Directors and
the compensation of the Executive Board as per Art. 8a and Art. 8b to the Shareholders’
Meeting each year for approval. In its proposal for the compensation of the Executive Board
as per Art. 8b, Section 1, the Board of Directors designates the period to which the approval
is to relate.
2 The Board of Directors shall determine the compensation of the individual Members
of the Board of Directors and the Executive Board within the framework of the overall
amounts as per Art. 8a-8c.
3 The Board of Directors adopts the annual compensation report.
4 The Board of Directors shall issue an internal regulation governing the organization
of the Compensation Committee.
Art. 20a Compensation Committee
1 The Compensation Committee shall consist of at least three Members of the Board of
Directors.
2 The Members of the Compensation Committee are elected by the Shareholders’ Meeting
for a term of office lasting until the close of the next ordinary Shareholders’ Meeting.
They shall also be eligible for re-election.
3 If the office of a Member of the Compensation Committee should become vacant, the
Board of Directors shall appoint a replacement from among its Members for the remaining
term of office.
4 The Compensation Committee shall support the Board of Directors in the following tasks:
a. determination and regular revision of the compensation strategy and compensation guidelines of the Company, as well as the corresponding performance criteria;
b. preparation of proposals to the Shareholders’ Meeting on the compensation of the Board
of Directors and the Executive Board; and
c. preparation of the Compensation Report.
The Compensation Committee may also submit proposals and recommendations relating
to other compensation matters to the Board of Directors.
5 The Board of Directors may assign other tasks and competencies to the Compensation
Committee.
Art. 20b Mandates outside the Company
1 Each Member of the Board of Directors may assume no more than four other mandates
in listed companies and no more than five other mandates in other legal entities.
2 The following mandates are exempt from this restriction:
a. mandates in legal entities that are controlled by the Company or that control the
Company;
b. mandates in legal entities not belonging to the Group that are exercised at the request
or order of the Company or one of its controlled legal entities; each Member of the
Board of Directors may exercise a maximum of ten such mandates; and
c. honorary mandates in charitable legal entities; each Member of the Board of Directors
may exercise a maximum of ten such mandates.
3 Mandates in the sense of Art. 20b are deemed to comprise activities in the most senior
executive and management bodies of legal entities that are obliged to obtain an entry
in the Commercial Register or a corresponding foreign register. The assumption of up to five
mandates in different legal entities under common control is deemed to constitute
one mandate.
Art. 20c Compensation agreements
1 The Company or its Group companies may conclude agreements with Members of the Board
of Directors with respect to their mandate and compensation.
2 The duration of such agreements and their termination shall comply with the term of office as
well as the prevailing legislation. Such contracts may not exceed the term of office
as per Art. 15, Section 2.
Art. 20d Credit facilities and loans
The Company may grant individual credit facilities and loans to each Member of the
Board of Directors up to a maximum of CHF 20,000,000 at market conditions.
Art. 20e Appointment, powers
The Board of Directors appoints an Executive Board that assumes responsibility for
managing and representing the Company in accordance with the regulations governing
the conduct of business issued by the Board of Directors.
Art. 20f Number of permissible mandates outside the Company
1 Each Member of the Executive Board may assume no more than one other mandate in a
listed company and no more than two other mandates in other legal entities.
2 The provisions of Art. 20b, Sections 2-3 shall apply analogously.
Art. 20g Compensation agreements
1 The agreements that form the basis for the compensation of Members of the Executive
Board are open-ended, with a maximum notice period of 12 months.
2 The agreement of a post-contractual prohibition of competition is permissible as long
as it is agreed for a maximum of one year and the corresponding compensation does
not exceed the amount that the Member of the Executive Board has received as compensation
in the twelve months prior to the termination of the employment contract with the
Company.
Art. 20h Credit facilities and loans
The Company may grant individual credit facilities and loans to each Member of the
Executive Board up to a maximum of CHF 20,000,000 at standard terms that apply in
the financial sector.
4. The Independent Auditors and the Special Auditors
Art. 21 Appointment and duties
1 The Independent Auditors shall be elected by the Shareholders’ Meeting for one year
and shall be responsible for carrying out all functions and duties incumbent upon
them by law.
2 The Special Auditors shall be elected by the Shareholders’ Meeting for the term of
one year and shall be responsible for the special audit reports in connection with
qualified capital increases (Art. 652f CO).
V. Financial year and allocation of the net profit
The Company’s financial year shall be determined by the Board of Directors.
Art. 23 Allocation of disposable profit
The allocation of the disposable profit shall be made by the Shareholders’ Meeting.
The distributions of a dividend and the establishment and utilization of special reserves,
if any, shall be decided by the Shareholders’ Meeting in accordance with Art. 671 ff of the Swiss
Code of Obligations.
VI. Dissolution and liquidation of the Company
Art. 24 Should the Company be dissolved, the Board of Directors shall carry out the liquidation
unless the Shareholders’ Meeting decides otherwise.
VII. Official notices and announcements
1 The Swiss Official Gazette of Commerce (Schweizerisches Handelsamtsblatt) shall be
the official medium for publication of the Company’s notices and announcements.
2 Notices and announcements to the shareholders shall be made in the Swiss Official
Gazette of Commerce (Schweizerisches Handelsamtsblatt), insofar as the law does not
prescribe some other manner of publication.
VIII. Transitional regulations
Art. 26 Conditional capital
1 The Company’s share capital pursuant to Art. 3 of the Articles of Association shall
be increased by an amount not exceeding CHF 12 000 000 through the issue of a maximum of
300 000 000 registered shares, to be fully paid in, each with a par value of CHF 0.04 through the voluntary or compulsory exercise of conversion rights and/or warrants granted
in connection with bonds or other financial market instruments of Credit Suisse Group AG, or any
of its Group companies, or through compulsory conversion of contingent convertible bonds
(CoCos) or other financial market instruments of Credit Suisse Group AG, or any of its Group
companies, that allow for contingent compulsory conversion into shares of the Company.
Shareholders’ subscription rights are excluded. Holders of financial market instruments
with conversion features and/or of warrants are entitled to subscribe to the new shares.
The Board of Directors fixes the conversion/warrant conditions.
The acquisition of shares through the exercise of conversion rights and/or warrants,
or through the conversion of financial market instruments with conversion features,
and any subsequent transfer of the shares are subject to the restrictions set out
under Art. 4 of these Articles of Association.
2 Contingent capital pursuant to Art. 26 of the Articles of Association is made available,
subject to para. 3, exclusively for the purpose of increasing share capital through
the conversion of bonds or other financial market instruments of Credit Suisse Group AG, or any of its
Group companies, that allow for contingent compulsory conversion into the Company’s
shares and that are issued in order to fulfil or maintain compliance with regulatory requirements
of the Company and/or any of its Group companies (contingent convertible bonds).
The Board of Directors is authorized when issuing such contingent convertible bonds
to exclude shareholders’ preferential subscription rights if these bonds are issued on the national
or international capital markets (including private placements with selected strategic
investors).
If preferential subscription rights are restricted or excluded by resolution of the
Board of Directors when contingent convertible bonds are issued:
(i) the contingent convertible bonds must be issued at prevailing market conditions,
(ii) the setting of the issue price of the new shares must take due account of the stock
market price of the shares and/or comparable instruments priced by the market at the
time of issue or time of conversion, and
(iii) conditional conversion features may remain in place indefinitely.
3 Deleted
Art. 26c Conversion capital
1 The Company’s share capital pursuant to Art. 3 of the Articles of Association shall be increased
by an amount not exceeding CHF 6,000,000 through the issue of a maximum of 150,000,000 registered shares, to be fully paid in, each with a par value of CHF 0.04, through the compulsory conversion upon occurrence of the trigger event of claims arising out of contingent
convertible bonds (CoCos) of Credit Suisse Group AG or any of its Group companies, or of other
financial market instruments of Credit Suisse Group AG or any of its Group companies, that provide
for a contingent or unconditional compulsory conversion into shares of the Company.
2 Shareholders’ preemptive rights are excluded. Holders of financial market instruments
with conversion features are entitled to subscribe to the new shares.
3 Shareholders’ preferential subscription rights with regard to financial market instruments
with conversion features will be granted. If a quick placement of contingent convertible
bonds (CoCos) in large tranches is required, the Board of Directors is authorized to exclude
shareholders’ preferential subscription rights. In such circumstances, these contingent
convertible bonds (CoCos) must be issued at prevailing market conditions.
4 The Board of Directors determines the issue price of the new shares taking due account
of the stock market price of the shares and/or comparable instruments.
5 The acquisition of shares through the conversion of financial market instruments with
conversion features, and any subsequent transfer of the shares are subject to the restrictions
set out under Art. 4 of these Articles of Association.
Art. 27 Authorized capital
1 The Board of Directors is authorized, at any time until April 29, 2024, to increase
the share capital, as per Art. 3 of the Articles of Association to a maximum of CHF 5,000,000 through the issuance of a maximum of 125,000,000 registered shares, to be fully paid up, each
with a par value of CHF 0.04. Increases by underwriting as well as partial increases are permissible. The issue price, the time of dividend entitlement, and the type of contribution will
be determined by the Board of Directors. Upon acquisition, the new shares will be subject to the
transfer restrictions pursuant to Art. 4 of the Articles of Association.
2 The Board of Directors is authorized to exclude shareholders’ subscription rights in favor of third parties if the new registered shares are used for (a) the acquisition of companies,
segments of companies or participations in the banking, finance, asset management
or insurance industries through an exchange of shares or (b) the financing/refinancing
of the acquisition of companies, segments of companies or participations in these industries,
or new investment plans. If commitments to service convertible bonds or bonds with warrants
are assumed in connection with company takeovers or investment plans, the Board of Directors
is authorized, for the purpose of fulfilling delivery commitments under such bonds, to
issue new shares excluding the subscription rights of shareholders.
3 The Board of Directors may allow subscription rights that are not exercised to expire
without compensation, or it may sell the subscription rights or the registered shares
for which they were granted at market conditions on the market or otherwise use them
in the interest of the Company.
The above text is a translation of the original German articles of association (Statuten)
which constitute the definitive text and are binding in law.
Zurich, December 7, 2022
CREDIT SUISSE GROUP AG
Paradeplatz 8
CH-8070 Zurich
Switzerland
www.credit-suisse.com