While the proposal for structural reform in the banking sector was not implemented in the EU, many of the ideas brought forward by the high-level expert group can be found in other regulatory initiatives.
It is now a decade since the Liikanen
Report was published. The task to assess the need for separation of business
lines, legal entities or assets and liabilities to ensure the
resolvability of every bank is now in the hand of the resolution
authorities.
Proposals for structural reform in the banking sector
Published in October 2012, the Liikanen Report
outlined the work by the high-level expert group commissioned by
Commissioner Michel Barnier to assess the need for structural reform in
the banking sector. Former governor of Bank of Finland Erkki Liikanen
chaired the group.
The thinking of the high-level expert group was structured along two
different avenues. One was based on the notion that that resolution
authorities will make the needed tough decisions to ensure resolvability
based on the assessment done during the annual resolution planning
process. Hence, a one-size-fits-all structural reform ex-ante, which
possibly would reduce the diversity in banking business models, would
not be needed. The other saw the need for a separation of significant
trading activity ex-ante to make resolution manageable at the time of
crisis. This would also reduce risk of contagion within large,
multi-business line banks and make bank easier to manage, supervise and
monitor, thus further reducing the room for excessive risk taking.
The final proposal for structural reform was a combination of the two avenues.
Proprietary trading and other high-risk trading were to be separated
from the socially most vital parts of deposit-taking and lending, while
bank-level specificities were to be accounted for by conditioning
further separation of, for example, market-making activity on the
credibility of recovery and resolution plans. The separation was to be
done within the group in terms of legal and operational barriers, and so
acknowledges the benefits of the universal banking model. The
implementation of the proposed structural reform was to be mandatory
only for banks with significant trading activity.
The legislative proposal on bank structural reform
drafted based on the work of the high-level expert group was withdrawn
by the EU Commission in 2018. While the high-level expert group was
working on its proposals, the Commission made the proposal for the Bank
Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD). At the same time, the European
Council asked for a roadmap to create the Banking Union. The BRRD was
adopted in spring 2014, while the Single Resolution Mechanism Regulation
(SRMR), creating the second pillar of the Banking Union, was adopted in
July 2014. The Single Resolution Board (SRB) with responsibility for
significant institutions in the Banking Union and the national
resolution authorities (including in Finland the Finnish Financial
Stability Authority (FFSA)) with the responsibility for less-significant
institutions were established in 2015. Now it is up to us resolution
authorities to show that we will, as needed, take the tough decisions
based on a bank specific assessment along the lines of the first avenue
in the Liikanen Report...
more at SRB
© Single Resolution Board
Key
Hover over the blue highlighted
text to view the acronym meaning
Hover
over these icons for more information
Comments:
No Comments for this Article