The urgent need for progress in banking integration: Today I will focus on the concrete actions we can take to achieve real progress towards a truly integrated prudential jurisdiction within the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) and within the current institutional and regulatory environment.
This forum has often played host to discussions on the integration of
the European banking sector. Industry representatives have frequently
complained about the lack of progress towards a European internal market
for banking services that is truly borderless. The debate has
traditionally focused on issues related to the euro area institutional
framework and legislative reforms. But despite the advances towards a
more integrated European institutional and regulatory framework,
progress has been underwhelming. For many banking products and services,
our market remains deeply segmented along national lines.
Today I
will focus on the concrete actions we can take to achieve real progress
towards a truly integrated prudential jurisdiction within the Single
Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) and within the current institutional and
regulatory environment. And by “we” I mean all of us, supervisory
authorities and market participants alike. At the ECB we are fully
prepared to play our part, but such progress must also be shaped by
sound projects and initiatives by banks.
Some argue that, until a
fully fledged banking union with all its three pillars is in place,
there is very little chance of integrating the European banking sector
and we are condemned to a collection of national banking sectors, even
within the single prudential jurisdiction.
But just before the
summer break we had a timely reminder of the difficulties in achieving
immediate political breakthroughs. After years of protracted
negotiations, the Eurogroup failed to reach an agreement on the roadmap
to complete the banking union.
While I am confident that agreement will eventually be found, we cannot
simply stand still while complex political negotiations play out.
Moreover,
as already mentioned, the political agreement will take the form of a
roadmap, with a number of intermediate targets. Completing the banking
union, including a fully mutualised European deposit insurance scheme
(EDIS), will take some time.
But, in the meantime, we cannot wait.
There is an urgent need for material progress towards an integrated
banking sector in the euro area. And considering the delicate role the
banking sector has to play in supporting a robust recovery from the
pandemic crisis, this is a matter of even greater urgency than in the
past.
These last 18 months have been extraordinary for a number of
reasons. First and foremost, we faced a severe public health crisis
which created extreme uncertainty for the trajectory of our economies
and the risks facing our banks. But we also had to deal with a whole
host of issues in a very compressed time frame. This could have
potentially sown the seeds of further fragmentation in the banking
union, with uneven national responses. However, I am very pleased that –
for the first time – there has been a completely unified European
supervisory response to the challenges that the pandemic crisis has
posed for euro area banks. We have taken unprecedented supervisory
decisions quickly, in close coordination with monetary policy measures.
We
have also seen the banking sector successfully adapt its operations to
the unprecedented constraints imposed by the measures taken to fight the
pandemic. Banks adjusted to a dramatic increase in the use of
technology, in terms of both how they work and how they interact with
their customers. This digitalisation also gave banks an opportunity to
make their business models more sustainable, increase their
profitability and become more attractive to long-term investors. With
this in mind, in January 2021 we published a Guide on the prudential
treatment of mergers and acquisitions.
We clarified how we assess merger transactions so that banks know what
to expect from us, and we think these clarifications have had an impact
on consolidation in the euro area banking sector. In the past few
months, we have directly applied the supervisory principles set out in
the Guide to several transactions.
But most consolidation
transactions still take place within Member States. The European banking
sector remains segmented along national lines, even within the single
prudential jurisdiction of European banking supervision.
Looking
back, much of the progress in cross-border integration that we saw
following the creation of Economic and Monetary Union was reversed in
the aftermath of the great financial crisis. And the cross-border
integration of the sector has progressed at snail’s pace in recent
years, even after European banking supervision was established in 2014
(see Chart 1). In fact, the measures adopted by national governments in
response to the great financial crisis also led to the “repatriation” of
many assets that were previously held in local subsidiaries of
cross-border groups. The launch of the SSM has not yet reversed this
trend. On the whole, subsidiaries currently account for around
two-thirds of EU foreign assets in the euro area, while branches make up
the remaining third....
mofre at SSM
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