COMPANIES

Bank for International Settlements

Office address: Centralbahnplatz 2, 4051 Basel, Switzerland
Website: bis.org
Year established: 1930
Company type: international financial institution
Employees: 600+ (globally)
Expertise: central banking cooperation, monetary policy analysis, financial stability and macroprudential policy, reserve management for central banks, foreign exchange and gold services, asset management for official reserves
Parent company: N/A
Key people: Pablo Hernandez de Cos (GM); Andrea Maechler (deputy GM); Veronique Sani (secretary general); Dessislava Guetcheva-Cheytanova (general counsel); Luis Bengoechea, Jens Ulrich, and Hyun Song Shin (department heads)
Financing status: shareholder‑owned company

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) is an international bank that serves central banks worldwide. It supports monetary and financial stability and serves bodies like the US Federal Reserve. In 2025, 63 member central banks own it, with headquarters in Basel, Switzerland.

History of Bank for International Settlements

In 1930, officials founded the Bank for International Settlements to manage German reparation obligations. Over that decade, rising tensions in Europe made cooperation harder, so central banks used the BIS for discreet support.

During World War II, it helped move gold reserves from Europe to New York to protect them. Over time, the bank shifted from handling reparations to supporting central banks as they worked to keep money and credit stable.

European cooperation and Bretton Woods

After 1945, European countries turned to the BIS to help rebuild their monetary systems. The Bank for International Settlements acted as technical agent for the European Payments Union, which supported trade and currency convertibility.

By 1958, this work helped restore convertibility across Europe and allowed the Bretton Woods system to operate fully. Through regular meetings in Basel, central bank leaders quietly coordinated actions to keep exchange rates and markets steady.

The Bank for International Settlements' global expansion

From the 1960s onward, growing cross‑border capital flows drew the BIS into wider global issues. Central banks used it as a forum to discuss dollar funding strains, gold questions, and exchange pressures.

Later financial crises reinforced the need for closer coordination on rules and oversight. In response, global authorities used the Bank for International Settlements as a base for new bodies focused on financial stability.

Research focus and private credit risks

To support these roles, the BIS built a research function focused on links between the real economy and finance. Its researchers publish studies, host visiting academics and run the BIS Research Network and Advisory Panel.

According to the Bank for International Settlements' 2025 report, private credit was estimated at about $2.5 trillion and showed growing exposure to retail investors and leverage. The study noted that funds offering frequent redemptions on long-term loans could face liquidity strains, especially as links between banks and private credit deepen.

Bank for International Settlements products and services

BIS offers investment-focused services that help central banks and official investors manage reserves and market risks:

Banking and liquidity products

  • BIS money market instruments: short-term placements in major reserve currencies
  • sight and notice accounts: flexible cash accounts for day‑to‑day liquidity
  • fixed and floating deposits: term deposits in single or basket currencies
  • short-term advances: collateralized credit lines for temporary funding needs

Tradable investment instruments

  • FIXBIS instruments: fixed-rate investments from one week to one year
  • medium-term instruments (MTIs): securities with maturities from one to five years
  • callable MTIs: MTIs with early redemption options for interest rate views

Reserve and asset management services

  • portfolio management mandates: delegated management of government bond portfolios
  • collective investment vehicles: open-ended funds in reserve currencies
  • custom investment guidelines: tailored risk and return rules for each client

Foreign exchange and gold solutions

  • FX trading services: spot, swaps, forwards, and options in key pairs
  • FX-linked deposits: deposits structured around foreign exchange movements
  • gold trading and deposits: gold spot, forwards, swaps, and dual‑currency structures
  • gold safekeeping and settlement: custody and transfers in London, Berne, and New York

Research, data, and market insight

  • financial stability research: studies on credit cycles and systemic risks
  • market statistics platform: global data on banking, debt, and derivatives
  • policy and risk reports: analysis that supports investment and risk decisions

These offerings are designed for central banks and other official bodies, not individual investors. The Bank for International Settlements also provides training, knowledge‑sharing, and technical support that help reserve managers strengthen investment and risk management practices.

Culture and corporate values

The Bank for International Settlements states that its work culture centers on people, mission, and a clear purpose. Below are values that support this culture:

  • excellence in performance
  • integrity
  • diversity and inclusion
  • sustainability and social responsibility
  • continuous improvement and innovation

According to the BIS, staff work in a global team, with competitive pay and a clear rewards package:

  • competitive salary: above similar organizations, adjusted for tax and living costs
  • pension benefits: defined benefit plan and lump-sum payment for early leavers
  • health and accident coverage: worldwide insurance for staff and eligible dependants
  • family allowances: support for dependants, including partial childcare cost reimbursement
  • work-life balance: family leave, flexible work options, and sports facilities
  • relocation support: moving expenses, housing assistance, and local orientation services
  • schooling assistance: contribution toward international school fees in Basel region
  • partner program: guidance to help partners work and integrate locally
  • visa and permits: help with work and residency documentation for families
  • fixed-term contracts: time-limited roles, with possible extension or conversion

The Bank for International Settlements says varied backgrounds and thinking styles are essential to serving international central banks. It cites gender, sexual orientation, nationality, race, age, abilities, beliefs, and education as protected dimensions.

About General Manager Pablo Hernández de Cos and key people

Pablo Hernandez de Cos is the GM of the Bank for International Settlements. Hernandez de Cos previously served as governor of the Bank of Spain. He holds a PhD in economics, plus degrees in economics, business administration, and law from universities in Spain.

The Bank for International Settlements' management team includes the following senior leaders and specialists:

  • Andréa Maechler is deputy GM and acting head of BIS Innovation Hub, overseeing central bank innovation work
  • Luis Bengoechea is head of banking department, managing reserve portfolios and liquidity services for official clients
  • Hyun Shin is economic adviser and head of monetary and economic department, leading macroeconomic and financial stability research
  • Véronique Sani works as secretary general and head of general secretariat, coordinating governance and internal support functions
  • Dessislava Guetcheva-Cheytanova is general counsel, handling legal risk, contracts, and regulatory matters
  • Jens Ulrich works as head of risk management, monitoring financial and operational risks across the bank

Overall management sits under the GM, who reports to the board of directors, with the deputy GM supporting strategic and operational decisions.

The future at Bank for International Settlements

The Bank for International Settlements provides the data that links foreign hedging flows to dollar weakness, giving investors a clearer story. Its work shows how non‑US investors' hedge decisions weaken the dollar in stress periods. These studies help advisors and asset managers read global flows and plan future currency strategies.

The bank also tracks how crowded key emerging‑market currency trades have become. By flagging Colombian and Mexican pesos trading well above 10‑year averages, the organization gives managers a concrete gauge of crowding risk. This kind of benchmark work should keep the BIS central to how future EM strategies and risk limits are set.

The latest Bank for International Settlements news

Displaying 23 results
State Street's private-credit ETF receives lukewarm response
ALTERNATIVES MAR 13, 2025
State Street's private-credit ETF receives lukewarm response

Data show the much-anticipated fund, launched in partnership with Apollo, has only seen two days of net inflows over two weeks.

Private credit's push into retail opens new vulnerability, warns BIS
ALTERNATIVES MAR 11, 2025
Private credit's push into retail opens new vulnerability, warns BIS

A new report adds to a string of alerts from watchdogs, noting that the growing role of small investors, use of leverage, and concentration risks "warrant monitoring."

Tremors in the bond markets
RIA NEWS JUL 22, 2024
Tremors in the bond markets

With geopolitics throwing in curveballs, what’s ahead?

'Francs' and beans: The G-10 currency set to sizzle
RIA NEWS NOV 01, 2023
'Francs' and beans: The G-10 currency set to sizzle

Swiss currency to outperform peers, says JPMorgan FX chief.

Why some experts think peak inflation is near
RIA NEWS JUN 06, 2022
Why some experts think peak inflation is near

Economists at Morgan Stanley warn that the risk of an inventory glut is growing, especially in sectors such as consumer discretionary and technology goods.

New worry that ESG investing is bubble as bonds pass $1 trillion
RIA NEWS OCT 07, 2020
New worry that ESG investing is bubble as bonds pass $1 trillion

Another $450 billion green bonds expected for 2021 but one strategist contends ESG a passing investment fad

FIXED INCOME DEC 11, 2017
Brace for steepest rate hikes since 2006 in new year

Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase predict average interest rates across advanced economies will climb to at least 1 percent in 2018.

Global markets quake as China devalues its currency
RIA NEWS AUG 09, 2015
Global markets quake as China devalues its currency

The central bank cut its daily reference rate by 1.9%, triggering the yuan's biggest one-day drop since China ended a dual-currency system in January 1994.

From stocks to bonds, the strong dollar hits global markets
EQUITIES FEB 03, 2015
From stocks to bonds, the strong dollar hits global markets

Societe Generale economist says the 'dollar economy' is going the wrong way.

FIXED INCOME NOV 23, 2014
More buyers than sellers in the bond market means yields will remain low in 2015

JPMorgan estimates global demand will outstrip supply by roughly $400 billion.

Former Treasury Secretary Geithner warns of calm before market storm

On the heels of publishing his new memoir, the former Treasury secretary talks about how today's market lull is reminiscent of the environment leading up to the crisis.

FIXED INCOME OCT 18, 2013
U.S. bill supply at Eisenhower-era low seen bolstering bonds

Supply of the shortest-term securities is shrinking, Barclays says

FIXED INCOME SEP 23, 2013
Demand strong as ever as institutions bid for bond sales

Demand for new Treasuries from their biggest owners is proving impervious to rising yields and the retreat of Wall Street dealers.

FIXED INCOME JUN 04, 2013
Bidding war ahead for Treasuries

Traders expect Uncle Sam to reduce issuance of STNs — driving prices up in the process

Collusion illusion: No conspiracy necessary to rig Libor
RIA NEWS DEC 05, 2012
Collusion illusion: No conspiracy necessary to rig Libor

New research shows that a single financial institution could rig the benchmark borrowing rate -- without colluding with rival banks. How? Read on, Macduff.