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Commission’s promoting the Banking union

Eugene Eteris, BC, Copenhagen, 16.09.2014.Print version
The financial crisis has shown that a deeper economic and monetary union and an integrated banking system are needed both for euro-zone countries and all other EU members as well, in order to support long-term financial stability. Banking Union is therefore both a crisis management tool that enables member states to repair the damage done and an instrument for greater financial stability.

In his speech made at the Euro Conference in Lisbon (15 September 2014) called "European Banking Union in the making", Jyrki Katainen Commissioner responsible for Economic and Monetary Affairs and the Euro underlined basic features of the EU banking union. Mr. Katainen is the presently functioning Commissioner for EMU – until the end of October – then Mr. Valdis Dombrovskis will take over as the new vise-president and a commissioner for euro and social dialogue.   


The Banking Union as a necessity

The Commission believes that the Banking Union will provide a stable basis on which to build greater financial stability; that can help support future growth via a healthier, more resilient banking sector; and that can ultimately regain the market confidence this crisis has shattered. Financial fragmentation should diminish while credit to the real economy should be reactivated: this is an important pillar of European comprehensive strategy for growth and investment.

 

For years, the banking sector has often been either the source or an amplifier of shocks. And thanks to the ever-present banking-sovereign link, these shocks have reverberated, weakening national economies, spreading contagion across the EU and, in some cases, more broadly.


The financial crisis has made clear that not only for those countries which share the euro, but for the EU as a whole, a deeper economic and monetary union and an integrated banking system are needed to support long-term financial stability.

 

Banking Union is therefore not only a crisis management tool that enables the states to repair the damage done by past loopholes or oversights. Thus, the main objectives of the banking union are to restore the proper functioning of the internal market by mitigating fragmentation, ending unnecessary national ring-fencing and thus completing the architecture of the economic and monetary union, as well as of the EU as a whole, argued Mr. Katainen.


Banking union: background

At the core of the banking union lies a set of harmonised rules and powers applicable to all EU-28 states. The so-called EU single rulebook brings the member states significantly closer to each other; although future is required to complete the necessary adjustment, the new regulatory framework establishes common rules for credit institutions and investment firms in EU-28 states, laying down improved capital requirements for the banking sector, regulating the prevention and where necessary management of bank failures, and ensuring better protection and greater transparency for depositors.

 

Besides, the EU requires a secure and centralised system of decision-making that will address fragmentation concerns. The two pillars of Banking Union now nearing completion represent a move towards a perspective of common utility as opposed to individual interest.

 

1. The Single Supervisory Mechanism, a critical backbone of Banking Union, represents a major breakthrough. Not only in terms of banking sector reform, but also from an internal market point of view. Establishing an institution for centralised supervision at European level, the EU will directly address the issue of national financial and banking supervisory authorities.

As is known, the ECB is working diligently to build cross-border, cross-cultural supervisory teams that will better reflect the real operations of European significant banks and will help avoid untoward influence. For the first time ever, bank regulators will follow the same detailed supervisory manual from Helsinki to Nicosia, enforcing a consistent and comprehensive common approach.

 

The Commissioner reminded that in November 2014, the ECB is expected to take on its full responsibilities with direct supervision of the largest banks, having completed an in-depth, comprehensive assessment of banks' balance sheets. The scope of the exercise includes 131 credit institutions across 19 EU states, covering around 85% of bank assets in the euro area, including Lithuania.

 

The asset quality review will be the first of this magnitude and will delve into the deepest corners of asset classifications and collateral valuations, and challenge the adequacy of banks' loan-loss provisions, capital and leverage. The stress test, which will be accompanied by a similar exercise by the EBA covering all EU member states, will assess bank balance sheets' resilience under stress scenarios. These elements will ensure that the ECB has a clear view of directly supervised banks from the outset, which is a difficult and heavy exercise, but a necessary one. It is for instance thanks to the asset quality review that the problems that were hidden in Banco Espirito Santo, in Portugal, were identified and swiftly and efficiently addressed.

 

The ECB is, moreover, emphasising quality assurance and transparency to secure the stringency of the exercise. This and our communication strategy in the coming weeks and months, I believe, will be the key to this exercise's success.

 

To secure financial stability, however, centralised supervisory decision-making must be accompanied by a centralisation of costs in case bank failures do occur. Whoever takes the decision must be able to face its financial consequences. The situation when a supervisory decisions were taken at European level, but the bill for possible supervisory failures would remain national is in the past, argued the Commissioner.

 

2. The second pillar of the Banking Union is the Single Resolution Mechanism, which will allow bank resolution, especially in cross-border cases, to be managed more effectively and efficiently. The framework established by the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive already means that bank failures can be tackled in a more orderly fashion by giving authorities the tools they need to keep critical functions alive. Under the Single Resolution Mechanism, common decision-making taken by a Single Resolution Board and financing from a Single Resolution Fund will produce additional advantages for the system as a whole. The introduction of clear bail-in requirements will also help reducing moral hazard and limiting to the maximum extent possible the direct exposure of taxpayers to bank failures. And finally, agreement on an improved Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive with harmonised coverage, ex-ante funding and faster payout periods will provide more certainty to depositors, an aspect of essence for the resolution framework.


Historic reminiscences…

When the financial crisis deepened in 2009, the EU came under heavy criticism for lacking a supervisory system and crisis management approach that adequately reflected its cross-border characteristics and potential for spillovers.

 

Banking Union, with its common framework of rules and powers, accompanied by centralised decision-making and financing, is the answer to that criticism, underlined the Commissioner.

He added that it took more than 200 years for the US to for such a system.

 

The banking union in the EU is a major step and a spectacular breakthrough for EU integration. Citizens may not realise it yet, but for the financial community, it is a game changer as important as the introduction of the euro. The member states are still in the early days of this new world and it will inevitably be a learning process.

 

The Commissioner underlined that the Banking Union amounted to a revolution: “it will change the way the banking sector operates, it will change the way the EU addresses inter-connectedness and spillovers; it is about collectively cutting the Gordian knot that has linked the banks with their Sovereigns for centuries”.

 

He added in the conclusion: “a successful Banking Union is absolutely necessary for the EU’s comprehensive approach to kick-start growth and investment. Alongside other strands – like the removal of sector-specific barriers to investment in energy, telecoms and transport, pursuing investment-friendly fiscal consolidation, and stepping up structural reforms – it well help to bring Europe back onto a path of stronger growth and job creation”.

 

Reference: European Commission, Jyrki Katainen, Vice-President of the European Commission and member of the Commission responsible for Economic and Monetary Affairs and the Euro, SPEECH/14/599 "European Banking Union in the making", 15/09/2014. In:  

http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_SPEECH-14-599_en.htm







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