The war in Ukraine and the unfolding tragedy there, is now not only the backdrop to our work at the SRB, but in some respects, it is centre-stage, not least because of the recent Sberbank case.
Good evening Madam Chair and good evening honourable members,
It is a pleasure to be with you once again at
the ECON Committee, and it is also wonderful to be here in person.
Thank you for the opportunity to update you on the work of the SRB in
promoting financial stability right across the Banking Union.
If I may, Madam Chair, I want to first set
our priorities at the SRB against the overall backdrop. Just 3 months
ago, when I last addressed this committee, the backdrop to our work at
the SRB was the pandemic and the economic impact of Covid-19.
However since then, the war in Ukraine and the unfolding tragedy there,
is now not only the backdrop to our work at the SRB, but in some
respects, it is centre-stage, not least because of the recent Sberbank
case.
I’ll talk about that case in my speech this
evening, before saying a few words on completing the Banking Union and
our work on the resolvability assessment.
[Recent resolution activity]
Earlier this month we had to intervene with regard to Sberbank Europe AG. It is a good example of putting policy into practice
at short notice. This crisis in this case unfolded with great speed
because of the current political situation and resulting sanctions.
With regard to Sberbank we had decisions to
make in three countries – Croatia, Slovenia and Austria. First, a 48
hours moratorium was deemed necessary for the group. In Croatia and Slovenia,
we deemed resolution appropriate and, within the moratorium period,
buyers for the two subsidiaries in these countries could be found in an
open sales process. In these two countries, operations continued on as
normal, with no impact on customers or on financial stability.
Turning to Austria,
we decided that no resolution action was required for the Austrian
parent company, because it was not in the public interest to put it into
the European resolution procedure, and therefore it is now being wound
up at national level in Austria. In other words, the bank is being dealt
with under normal insolvency procedures and depositors are protected
under the national DGS.
We were able to manage the crisis, thanks to
the structures in place. The SRB is an independent agency of the
European Union, but we worked hand in glove with many partners at
national, EU and international level and I am thankful for the excellent
cooperation we received at all these levels. We can call these three
decisions a success for banking resolution and financial stability in
Europe.
[A success, but room for improvement]
The three decisions taken have one thing in common – protection.
The decisions protect financial stability; and the decisions protect
depositors up to an amount of at least 100,000 euro in Austria and with
no limits in both Slovenia and Croatia. We acted to protect the public
interest and ensure financial stability. All of this has been done
without having to use public funds, so not only are Sberbank’s customers
protected, the taxpayer is too.
If the proof of the pudding is in
the eating, then the case of Sberbank is further proof that the EU
resolution framework works.
However, we
were – again – faced with a couple of problematic points. In this group,
we were dealing with different legal frameworks simultaneously,
creating quite some challenges. It is important to highlight that this
would be amplified for a larger banking group operating in say half a
dozen or more Banking Union countries. This is why I have long been
calling for a harmonisation of the framework for insolvency of financial
institutions. This case should serve as reminder of the need to
get on with the job of harmonisation, not least to allow handling the
failure of a bank in a consistent manner within the Banking Union or
better still, the EU.
The second point I would highlight is the need for EDIS. Customers of these banks needed to be assured that their savings or deposits, are protected up to 100,000 euro, so
long as the national or regional-backed DGS can pay out. It would be
much better to have a European scheme to provide reassurance to
depositors. It is important we can communicate with confidence
in a time of crisis. At present, the set-up is not yet optimal. So, we
saw quite some tension building up in at least one member state as
citizens were questioning the safety of their deposits also in other
banks. We have to be able to instil confidence at a time of crisis, and a
proper EDIS would help to do this.
[Pause] Let’s be honest; deposits are only protected insofar as the DGS can pay out. [Pause] A European layer of protection is required.
I repeat my words of last December: the time for talking is over – we lack EDIS and we need to treat all depositors equally at least throughout the Banking Union.
[Resolvability assessment]
A more transparent assessment of resolvability has long been a key priority for the SRB. That’s why we have defined a heat-map on assessing resolvability,
designed as a tool to monitor, benchmark and communicate on banks’
progress towards full resolvability. The heat-map illustrates the
results of the combined assessment of the level of impact of each
resolvability profile on the overall resolvability and the progress made
by banks according to the Expectations for Banks document published by the SRB in April 2020.
We are currently
evaluating the first horizontal assessment. Achieving an overall
consistent and also realistic assessment and heat-map is not an easy
task, but it is a very valuable exercise – and we are clear to banks lagging behind: they must get their house in order. We
stay committed to publishing an aggregated heat-map once the results
are of a sufficient quality soon, and then start a yearly reporting
cycle.
In a nutshell, preliminary results of the assessment performed last year show that:
- banks have made
most progress on the capabilities that were phased-in in previous years,
in line with the timeline indicated in the Expectations for Banks.
- G-SIIs are more
advanced on resolvability profiles such as Governance, Loss Absorption
Capacity, FMI contingency planning and communication planning,
consistently with the international standards on these resolvability
conditions.
- The other banks are
less advanced on governance and loss absorbing capacity, while they
appear broadly aligned in the other profiles.
- Significant
progress has instead to be made on the capabilities which are expected
to be phased-in during the current or next resolution planning cycle
(e.g. liquidity in resolution, adequacy of management information system
for resolution, separability of assets and liabilities under a transfer
tool and restructuring after bail-in tool).
We remain committed
bringing all banks to the same resolvability-footing by end-2023 and
publishing an aggregated heat-map once we have completed the assessments
in course of this summer. You will therefore receive more updates from
us during our next meetings....
more at SRB
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