The SRB’s role is to develop resolution plans that are ready for action at very short notice, for the banks under our remit. If a bank should fail, our goal is to make sure that happens in an organised and orderly way.
We make sure that any critical roles it
plays in the economy continue, that the failure doesn’t bring down other
banks or businesses, and, importantly, that we don’t reach into
taxpayers’ pockets to cover losses.
This is the theory, but we have to be ready and able to quickly put the theory into practice. If we decide that it’s in the public interest for a bank to be resolved, rather than liquidated, we can use a number of tools
to do that. The bail-in tool is, of course, key. This means that
shareholder and creditor debt can be bail-in to cover losses. But we
have other tools at our disposal including selling the business, setting
up a bridge institution or, coupled with any other resolution tool,
using an asset separation company to deal with impaired assets.
These tools, known as transfer tools, can be a solution for mid-sized banks, which pose particular challenges for resolution,
as well as being part of the plan for larger banks, especially as a
variant strategy or as part of a business reorganisation after
resolution. Transfer tools are an essential component of the resolution
powers granted to the SRB, allowing for a failing bank to exit the
market in an orderly way without liquidation aid granted by the state.
The costs are foremost borne by shareholders and creditors and, if the
access requirements are met, financing by the Single Resolution Fund
will be available. So, the SRB must make sure that transfer tools are
possible to implement successfully.
That’s why the SRB is working on operational
implementation manuals for executing the sale of business tool (both
share and asset deal), the asset separation tool, the bridge institution
tool, and the use of the Single Resolution Fund for providing
collateralised loans or guarantees on the performance of assets to third
parties, under specific conditions. These include a set of supporting
tools and templates that follow market standards and best practice. This
will be framed within a universal resolution process of a modular
nature, with the possibility to implement certain tools or elements,
depending on the characteristics of a particular crisis case. This
provides for the flexibility that is needed to react to new information
(e.g. investor feedback, change in market conditions, increased
liquidity outflows from the (f)ailing bank), as it becomes available.
Our operational enhancements fit seamlessly into
the SRB’s existing extensive crisis preparation. They will facilitate
engagement, communication, and negotiation with professional investors, a
crucial aspect in the short amount of time available to complete a bank
resolution. Enabling professional investor due diligence and a
marketing process is of the essence for successfully implementing the
resolution transfer tools.
Planning for resolution stands at the core of our
mission. Empirical evidence shows that a bank crisis can escalate fast
and market conditions can vary and change rapidly. The
operationalisation of transfer tools also allows us to quickly put into
action, in a flexible way, the main or variant resolution plan, if
conditions or new information arising during the resolution process
dictate.
Being able to use transfer tools means that the SRB
can put resolution into action – and quickly. This provides us with a
firm but flexible way to carry out our work in resolution, in order to
ensure we protect taxpayers’ money and that the economy continues to
benefit from financial stability.
SRB
© Single Resolution Board
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