Banks are required to include bail-in recognition clauses in relevant contracts under third country law to ensure that the liabilities under these contracts can be bailed in (written down or converted) in the event of resolution.
The SRB has published today its policy on how
banks can notify the authorities when bail-in recognition clauses
cannot be added to contracts under third-country law. This explains how
the SRB will apply, in practice, the rules set out in Article 55(2) BRRD
and further detailed in the forthcoming delegated and implementing
regulations based on the applicable Regulatory and Implementing
Technical Standards.
Banks are required to include bail-in
recognition clauses in relevant contracts under third country law to
ensure that the liabilities under these contracts can be bailed in
(written down or converted) in the event of resolution. However, banks
may determine that it is impracticable to include a bail-in recognition
clause in a particular contract. In that case, they need to notify their
resolution authority. The resolution authority then assesses the
notification and may require the inclusion of the clause.
The SRB
has identified (based on Article 55(7) BRRD) four preliminary categories
of liabilities, for which the impracticability notification and
assessment are simplified. These are:
- Liabilities resulting from trade finance operations, under internationally agreed frameworks and protocols;
- Liabilities resulting from project finance activities, under official standardised terms;
- Liabilities to FMI service providers, where the services are provided on standard terms not susceptible to bilateral negotiation;
- Minor operating liabilities,
arising from (non-critical) business operations, where the terms of the
contract are set by the provider and not bilaterally negotiated.
It
is banks’ responsibility to make themselves resolvable. This includes
incorporating bail-in recognition clauses in all relevant liabilities
that are out of scope of the impracticability regime. Liabilities that
do not contain such clauses (for reasons of impracticability or
otherwise) will not count towards minimum requirements for own funds and
eligible liabilities (MREL).
SRB
© Single Resolution Board
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