The proposal still fails to respect the commitment by the national and European authorities that this transposition would not lead to a significant increase in capital for all banking communities.
The European Commission has just
published its legislative proposal regarding transposition of the
accords adopted by the Basel Committee in December 2017. The proposal
still fails to respect the commitment by the national and European
authorities that this transposition would not lead to a significant
increase in capital for all banking communities. The effectiveness of
the model for financing our continent's economy and its ability to
compete equally with other geographical regions are at stake, at a time
when the investment needs for climate and digital revolutions are
gigantic.
The banking sector is ready to ensure that the mandate for the final
transposition of the Basel accords is fully respected, over the long
term, and does not believe that an increase in banks' capital is
justified: the health crisis has proved the relevance of the banking
model, and its ability to finance the economy without any impact on its
solidity.
It is therefore essential that the good practices of
our economy's financing model are recognised, whether in terms of
housing loans, financing of SMEs, the role of financial markets that
need to be developed, both to continue to effectively serve needs and to
ensure equal competition with banks on other continents. This "level
playing field" is vital to ensuring European strategic autonomy, at a
crucial time when considerable financial investments are required in all
business sectors in order to succeed, in an inclusive way, with the
ecological and digital transition: €330bn/year for the ecological
transition and €125bn/year for the digital transition according to the
ECB.
In the framework of the negotiation process, which will
last several months, the banking profession will continue to hold
discussions with the European authorities to propose technical
transposition solutions in line with these objectives and to further
develop the European Commission's initial text, which entails several
interesting proposals, but which lacks permanent and global reach.
Nicolas
Théry, chairman of the FBF, says: "This transposition proposal does not
yet allow Europe to compete with other geographic areas in terms of
investment and capital. It takes into account in temporary and partial
ways the specific characteristics of our continent's financing model
(such as the fact that financial markets and securitization are less
developed in Europe, the smaller share of rated SMEs and the type of
mortgage, particularly in France, that ensures broad access to property
under very secure conditions). The Council of the European Union and the
European Parliament must ensure, in a permanent and global frame, that
strategic objectives enabling Europe to develop its autonomy in
financing the climate and digital transition prevail, both for its
companies and its citizens."
FBF
© FBF - French Banking Federation
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