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02 May 2013

EBCI/Vienna Initiative: Deleveraging abating in emerging Europe amid regulatory and structural shifts


The latest CESEE Deleveraging Monitor finds that the second wave of funding reductions by western banks that started in mid-2011 is petering out. However, funding reductions have not stopped in all countries of the region, and remain significant in Hungary and Slovenia.

The report also noted that:

  • Current ample global liquidity has not yet led to a return of cross-border lending to CESEE, reflecting the still significant balance sheet pressures of parent banks and subsidiaries alike as well as the continuing trend to rebalance the funding of CESEE subsidiaries toward local sources.
  • Private sector credit remains generally anaemic in the region as a result.
  • The second round of the Vienna 2 Initiative's bank lending survey suggests that weak credit reflects both restrictive demand and supply factors. Among the latter, banks emphasise high non-performing loans over funding constraints as the key factor behind weak credit. At the same time, the results confirm that the drive to lower loan-to-deposit ratios and to rebalance CESEE subsidiaries’ funding sources continues.
  • Overall, the risks of deleveraging becoming disorderly have receded. However, given the high degree of uncertainty about the optimum level of foreign funding and loan-to-deposit ratios in the region in the medium term, further substantial funding adjustment cannot be ruled out, which calls for continued vigilance of the deleveraging process.

In addition, Steering Committee Chair and National Bank of Poland President Marek Belka submitted suggestions and remarks on the evolving Banking Union project to the leaders of European institutions on behalf of a Vienna 2 Initiative working group. 2 The document focuses on the project’s impact on host countries in emerging Europe. It stresses that a geographically inclusive and fully-fledged banking union, incentivised with appropriate conditions for participation is in the interest of all cross-border group stakeholders - home and host authorities and banks - in Europe's deeply integrated financial markets.

Press release



© European Commission


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