Switzerland believes it can clinch a deal with US authorities to end investigations into its banks over helping wealthy Americans evade taxes, the country's finance minister said on Saturday.
"I think that we will find a deal and that we will have a solution," Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said in an interview with Swiss television on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum.
Widmer-Schlumpf said she would meet US Attorney General Eric Holder in the next few weeks in her latest bid to end U.S. tax investigations into a number of Swiss banks, including Credit Suisse and Julius Baer.
"We are in very close discussions now," she told a news conference at the Forum in Davos, but declined to give a timetable for the talks on the thorny issue which have dragged on for two years.
"We have our ideas. They have their ideas but we are both obliged to find a solution."
Dozens of Swiss bankers and their clients have been indicted in recent years, following a 2009 agreement by UBS AG, the largest Swiss bank, to enter into a deferred-prosecution agreement, turn over 4,450 client names and pay a $780 million fine after admitting to criminal wrongdoing in selling tax-evasion