EP negotiators agreed with the Council on common EU standards regulating the transfer of bad loans from banks to secondary buyers while protecting borrowers’ rights.
Negotiators agreed on harmonised binding
provisions for all member states. They ensured that borrowers are not
worse off following the transfer of their credit agreement and member
states will be able to maintain or introduce stricter rules in order to
protect consumers.
Secondary markets for NPLs
The agreed measures foster the
development of professional secondary markets for credit agreements
originally issued by banks and qualified as non-performing. Third
parties (credit purchasers) would be able to buy such NPLs across the
EU. Credit purchasers (for example investment funds) are not creating
new credit, but buying existing NPLs at their own risk. Therefore, they
do not need special authorisation but will have to comply with borrower
protection rules.
Supervised debt collection
Credit servicers are legal persons
acting on behalf of credit purchasers and managing rights and
obligations under a non-performing credit agreement such as payments
collection or renegotiation of terms of the agreement. The EP
negotiators made sure that they would have to obtain authorisation and
be subject to supervision by the member states’ competent authorities.
Member states should also ensure that there is a publicly accessible
up-to-date list or a national register of all credit servicers. In order
to protect consumers, all credit purchasers will have an obligation to
have a credit servicer appointed by a host country for consumer
portfolios. In addition, third country credit purchasers will also have
to appoint a credit servicer for SMEs portfolios to protect
entrepreneurs.
Protecting borrowers
The uniform level of protection for
borrowers who cannot pay their debts, agreed during the negotiations
requires credit purchasers and credit servicers to provide accurate
information, respect and protect personal information and borrowers’
privacy and refrain from any harassment, coercion or undue influence.
In advance of the first debt collection,
a borrower will also have the right to be notified in a clear and
understandable manner on paper or another durable medium concerning any
transfer of a creditor’s rights. The information should include a date
of transfer, identification, contact details and authorisation of a new
credit servicer or a credit service provider, as well as detailed
information on the amounts due by the borrower. Additionally, the
borrower should be informed where they can submit complaints.
MEPs ensured that borrowers should not
be worse off following the transfer of their credit agreement. To this
end, fees and penalties charged by servicers including transfer costs
cannot change nor any additional costs be imposed other than related to
this credit agreement. Furthermore, the contract and obligations between
a credit servicer towards a credit purchaser should not be altered by
outsourcing of credit servicing.
Finally, the negotiators agreed to take
into account a borrower’s individual circumstances such as a mortgage
linked to a residential property and ability to repay a loan while
deciding on measures. Such measures may include partial refinancing of a
credit agreement, modifying the terms of the agreement, extending the
terms of the loan, currency conversions, and other ways to facilitate
repayment. Member states may apply measures that work best for borrowers
under national regimes but should have an appropriate set of measures
at national level.
Quotes
Esther de Lange
(EPP, NL), the co-rapporteur said: “It is a big relief that we can
finally get on with the work to solve the challenge of non-performing
loans held by the banks. The deal on Friday evening can help us prevent
the economic downturn during the corona-crisis from turning into a new
banking crisis. This directive will create a European secondary market
for problematic loans and simultaneously make sure that the people who
have taken out these loans are treated fairly.”
Irene Tinagli
(S&D, IT), the ECON Chair and co-rapporteur said: “With this
Directive we make clear that the development of a real, efficient and
well-regulated European secondary market for NPLs must go hand in hand
with all possible efforts by creditors to make credit performing again,
and the highest possible level of protection for borrowers. This is even
more important now when we are still bearing the consequences of the
COVID-19 pandemic; we cannot risk the recovery being jeopardised by
decisions that penalise households and firms”.
Background
Addressing any possible future
accumulation of Non Performing Loans (NPLs) is essential to
strengthening the Banking Union and ensuring competition in the banking
sector, as well as maintaining financial stability and encouraging banks
to lend so as to create jobs, stimulate growth, and support the
post-COVID-19 recovery in the EU.
NPLs are commonly defined as loans that are either more than 90 days past due, or are unlikely to be fully repaid.
Next steps
Parliament, Council and Commission are
now working on the technical aspects of the text. Thereafter, the
agreement must be approved by the Economic and Monetary Affairs
Committee and the Parliament as a whole.
ECON
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