Banking resolution is not always easy. And this is particularly true for the topic of today’s conference, and that is ‘How can we deal with the crisis of small and medium-sized banks?’
      
    
    
      Thank you very much to the Bank of Italy for the invitation to join 
you this afternoon. And if it is not too late, I want to wish you all a 
very happy new year. Hopefully, given the initial rollout of the vaccine we have seen right across the EU since Christmas, there is cause for hope for the year ahead.  
Now, I’m sure that some of you have made resolutions for the new year,
 to be healthier, to do more sport, drink less alcohol and the like…  
and I am also sure that today, just two weeks later, some of you may 
have given up on some resolutions, already!
Well, despite the 
tradition to give up on new resolutions after just a few weeks, let me 
reassure you, that we are a determined bunch at the SRB! And that means 
resolution in banking is here to stay. Just like the resolutions in our 
own lives, banking resolution is not always easy. And this is particularly true for the topic of today’s conference, and that is ‘How can we deal with the crisis of small and medium-sized banks?’
This
 is not an easy question to answer but I am sure that in the panel 
discussions today there will be much food-for-thought. I want to look at
 a two main areas in my speech today.
The first: The role of the SRB in ensuring financial stability across the system.
The second:
 The potential issues with the small and medium-sized entities in the 
financial sector because of the current framework, and what solutions 
might be put forward to improve the situation.
[Part One: The role of the SRB / When do we resolve?]
So, to the first part of my speech - a look at the SRB’s job in ensuring financial stability.
The
 SRB’s role is to develop resolution plans and ensure they are ready to 
be put into action at very short notice, for the banks under its remit. At
 present, the SRB covers 128 banking groups within the Banking Union – 
this includes the largest banks, that is to say, those under SSM 
supervision as well as certain smaller cross-border groups.  The 
logic for this by legislators in framing the BRRD and the SRMR was 
simple – the largest banks in each member state when getting into 
trouble can create problems across Europe, so they should be managed at 
EU level. Many of them are active cross-border in Europe or 
internationally.
There is sound logic to this. It made sense to 
ensure a strong European regulatory framework for these banks, since the
 economy and thus also smaller banks rely heavily on stability in larger
 banks, too. Incidentally, this is also the reason why every institution
 – even the smaller ones – must pay a contribution to the Single 
Resolution Fund. All institutions benefit from the additional stability 
the fund - and soon its backstop – provide and so this is why everyone 
contributes.  
The plan for almost all banks under the SRB remit is resolution and not insolvency.
 I have said in the past that resolution is ‘for the few and not for the
 many’. This is correct, since the SRB deals with 128 banking groups out
 of the more than 3,000 banks across the Banking Union. For the banks under the SRB’s remit, in general, we expect and plan for the use of resolution tools.
 Even for those banks where we firmly believe that National Insolvency 
Procedures would be the solution in case of failure, we have to ensure 
their resolvability.
The decision to put a failing institution into resolution depends on the outcome of a “public interest assessment”
 or PIA, determining in particular if the preservation of a bank’s 
critical functions is required to maintain financial stability. If the 
PIA’s outcome is negative, a failing bank will be sent into national 
insolvency, and I’ll come back to this in a moment.
Resolution is not a magic wand - losses will still be inherent in any resolution,
 it’s just that they will be distributed more fairly than before and 
that there is less uncertainty or ambiguity and thus less risk to 
financial stability. Please let us keep in mind that in any failing 
business in a market economy it is for equity and creditors to foot the 
bill.
Banks whose failure poses much less of a risk to financial stability
 can be dealt with under national insolvency proceedings, however the 
basic rule holds that banks need to be resolvable and have enough 
loss-absorption capacity to avoid any adverse effects. This is the 
argument for MREL – in case of banks that go into resolution to allow 
the necessary funds for loss absorption and recapitalisation; in case of
 banks that can be put into insolvency there is still the need to set an
 adequate amount for loss absorption.
[Part Two: Challenges and possible solutions for small & medium-sized banks] 
This brings me to the second part of my speech this afternoon: the challenges and possible solutions for dealing with small and medium-sized banks.
I
 suppose the first thing to say is that in Europe, we have no common 
definition as to what ‘mid-sized’ or ‘middle-class’ bank actually means.
 There is a huge variation across the 21 Banking Union states. A 
mid-sized bank could be an LSI, but it might also be an SI. However, for
 the purposes of the discussion today, I think we can say that a mid-sized bank is a bank of small to medium-size in relation to the market it operates in, heavily reliant on deposit funding.
 No matter what the size of the bank, and what tier we might have it 
categorised in, to ensure financial stability, there is need for an 
implementable solution should that bank get into difficulty.
Of course, our immediate concern at the SRB is for those banks that must become resolvable, that is the 128 banking groups I mentioned. These
 are the largest banks, but within those 128, we have a huge variety of 
shapes and sizes, and as I said, these ‘mid-sized’ or ‘middle class’ 
banks can be SIs, which is where I will turn my attention now.
I want to state clearly that there is no easy way out: All SIs have to become operationally resolvable and need to build the necessary MREL to allow a resolution scheme to be executable.
Resolution
 tools vary and in particular, ‘Sale of Business’ and Asset Separation 
tools might be best suited for these banks. However, they come at a 
cost, as they need to be prepared and made implementable.
MREL in these banks might often mean equity only. This provides an added challenge,
 because we are faced with the risk that this might have been, or rather
 most likely has been, depleted at the point of FOLTF leaving little 
room for resolution.
At the same time, it is absolutely clear that
 we cannot have a layer of banks that is considered too big for one of 
the Banking Union’s twenty-one plus national insolvency procedures but 
making it resolvable is considered unfeasible. This could mean these 
banks get a free ride in ‘going concern’ and possible manage to distort 
competition, and in a ‘gone concern’ situation they end up with the 
taxpayer or the industry footing the bill.
[Just to avoid a 
misunderstanding: Supervision and resolution planning have to be 
proportional, and we take this very seriously. But at the same time the 
old argument of same business, same risk, same rules also implies that 
for example access to funding, be it from the DGS or the SRF cannot be 
different for small and mid-sized and large financial institutions.]
The
 completion of the Banking Union through implementation of a Common 
European Deposit scheme, or the ‘third pillar’ of the Banking Union, 
with sufficient powers, in particular transfer tools, is a major part of
 the solution in order address the challenges around the failures of 
these banks.
The lack of a harmonised EU liquidation regime is a major obstacle towards a fully-fledged Banking Union.
 When we are looking at whether or not to resolve a bank, the SRB’s 
assessment of the no-creditor-worse-off principle seeks to ensure that 
the treatment of creditors in resolution is not worse than the one they 
would have received under normal insolvency proceedings.
Currently, with twenty-one plus different insolvency frameworks
 in the Banking Union, the analysis of the insolvency counterfactual for
 a cross-border bank in resolution is a challenge, and results in 
diverging outcomes depending on the home country of the institution. 
Moreover, the ‘failing or likely to fail’ assessment is not always 
aligned to the criteria for liquidation at national level and may 
similarly lead to different conclusions.
Bank insolvency procedures should be subject to common standards and practices at EU level.
 This would solve the problem when larger banks are not to be resolved, 
but it would also solve problems when dealing with smaller banks. The best solution would be EU-wide [administrative] rules on insolvency proceedings for the banking sector. This harmonisation would have five distinct advantages for all sizes of banks:
- First, it would facilitate resolution planning for cross-border banking groups;
 - Second it would level the playing field and eliminate wrong incentives;
 - Third provide the industry and investors with the same level of certainty in liquidation as in resolution;
 - Linked to that third benefit is number four:
 a stronger CMU, since investors would have more certainty when 
investing cross-border. For example, no matter if they invest in a 
medium-sized bank that then grows and falls under the SRB, or suddenly 
has its home in another state, the rules (and thus the risk) in 
regulation terms remain the same.
 - Fifth, an efficient and effective insolvency framework would also help addressing legacy assets
 and avoiding the build-up of new non-performing loans, which by the way
 as we try to emerge from Corona, are only going to grow, but that is an
 aside and I won’t dwell on this point this afternoon.
 
These
 ideas are not new. Way back in 2010, the European Commission’s 
Communication on an EU Framework for Crisis Management called for 
“further harmonisation of bank insolvency regimes, with the aim of 
resolving and liquidating banks under the same procedural and 
substantive insolvency rules”. Unfortunately, not much has changed 
eleven years on.
In the interim, while waiting for the Holy Grail, the SRB developed National Handbooks
 to define how to implement resolution schemes in each country, as well 
as national implementation steps for a decision not to adopt resolution.
 This was a step in the right direction, but is only a ‘second best’ 
option and not comparable to a harmonisation of bank insolvency 
procedures – something only legislators can deliver.
Proposals
 for harmonisation across the board will inevitably be fraught with 
political perils and resistance. An incremental approach – such as the 
one we saw in the harmonisation of the ranking of unsecured debt 
instruments in insolvency – may be a more pragmatic solution. The 
ultimate goal, however, must be to put in place an EU liquidation regime alongside an EU resolution regime, something akin to a European FDIC. Indeed, I will be interested to hear Art’s insights from the FDIC  later this afternoon.
[Conclusion]
Ladies
 and gentlemen, I am coming to a close. What is clear, is that the 
current resolution framework, for significant banks in Europe, is 
working. It is contributing to financial stability and it is helping to 
protect the taxpayer from future bail-outs, by ensuring more responsible
 management of risk in individual banks from the outset. What is also 
clear, is that the framework is set up to ensure that while all of the 
major banks – those ones under SRB remit – must be resolvable, the fact 
remains that resolution is for the few, not the many. And so, there is a
 gap in our financial stability framework that certainly does need to be
 plugged.
I thank all of you for your work on the various papers 
being discussed today. It is important we have research and reflection 
in this area in order to develop solutions capable of dealing with the 
“middle class” of banks. I am sure there are many ideas and solutions 
that are worth mulling over, and hopefully some of them may even be the 
basis for future legislative reforms in the EU. 
Time really is of
 the essence, especially since I am more than aware of the pace of EU 
decision making. Lest there be any doubt, it is a long process! And yet,
 while this process is going to take time, it is vital. Vital to the 
success of our Banking Union, and vital to ensuring financial and 
economic stability right across Europe and further afield.
And I think that stability is something all of us can agree would be welcome in our world at this time.
SRB
      
      
      
      
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