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31 January 2020

EBA launches 2020 EU-wide stress test exercise


The adverse scenario follows for the first time a ‘lower for longer’ narrative, a recession coupled with low or negative interest rates for a prolonged period. The EU real GDP would decline by 4.3% cumulatively by 2022, resulting in the most severe scenario to date. The EBA expects to publish the results of the exercise by 31 July 2020.

The stress test is designed to provide supervisors, banks and other market participants with a common analytical framework to consistently compare and assess the resilience of EU banks to economic shocks. In line with the previous two exercises, no pass-fail threshold has been included as the results of the exercise are designed to serve as an input to the Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP).

The baseline scenario for EU countries is based on the projections from the national central banks of December 2019, while the adverse scenario assumes the materialisation of the main financial stability risks that have been identified by the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB) and which the EU banking sector is exposed to. The adverse scenario also reflects recent risk assessments by the EBA.

The narrative depicts an adverse scenario related to a prolonged period of historically low interest rates coupled with a strong drop in confidence leading to a significant weakening of economic growth in EU countries. This is amplified by trade tensions at the global level. Slowing growth momentum and/or rising risk premia could further challenge debt sustainability in the public and private sectors across the EU.

The possible prolongation of negative growth and the low interest rate environment could further exacerbate the search for yield behaviour by investors, leading to under-pricing of risks and asset price misalignments, which could reverse as market sentiment changes and/or risks materialise.

The adverse scenario is designed to ensure an adequate level of severity across all EU countries. By 2022, the EU real GDP would decline by 4.3% cumulatively, the unemployment rate would rise by 3.5 percentage points, equity prices in global financial markets would fall by 25% in advanced economies and by 40% in emerging economies, residential real estate prices would decline by 16%, and commercial real estate prices would decline by 20%.

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