Insurance Europe: EU regulation must not jeopardise long-term investment

25 March 2013

Insurers are increasingly important suppliers of long-term financing. Insurance Europe warmly welcomes the European Commission's Green Paper on the long-term financing of the European economy.

“We fully support the Commission’s aim of starting a broad debate on how to address the urgent challenge of satisfying the large-scale and long-term investment requirements in the European economy”, said Sergio Balbinot, president of Insurance Europe.

As the insurance industry carries out its primary function as a provider of risk-transfer, protection and pension products, it generates predictable streams of claims over long periods and has historically been a natural investor in long-term assets. In the current economic and financial turmoil, insurers have an important role to play in EU growth and stability.

“In the wave of regulatory reforms currently facing the European insurance industry, it is therefore vital that any changes do not jeopardise insurers’ ability to provide this much-needed long-term financing and stability to the economy”, said Balbinot. “Europe’s renewed economic growth depends on it.”

Insurers are the largest non-bank institutional investors in Europe. Insurers invest in a broad range of asset classes, with two-thirds held in corporate and government bonds. Both directly and indirectly, they provide funding for activities on which European economic growth depends, such as infrastructure projects, mortgages, government debt and investments in SMEs and large corporates.

As the Green Paper rightly recognises: “… if banks reduce their exposure to long-term real assets as a consequence of increasing liquidity requirements, institutional investors with long-term liabilities could fill the gap as long as the regulatory framework avoids an excessive focus on short-term volatility".

Insurance Europe will now carry out a detailed analysis of the Green Paper and respond to the consultation.

Press release


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