The banking sector maintains strong capital and liquidity positions. According to third-quarter results available for listed banks, the sector continues to record good levels of profitability. However, the euro area economic outlook has further deteriorated.
We face a period of
lower growth and possible recession, with significant uncertainty over
energy supplies. While higher interest rates and margins are boosting
banks’ profitability right now, they also affect the ability of highly
leveraged customers to pay back their debts or fulfil margin calls and
may trigger sharp adjustments in volatile financial markets. Banks need
to prepare for the potential adverse impacts of the uncertain
environment on their business.
The new risk environment warrants
some adjustments to our supervisory approach. Today, I will outline how
we are asking banks to prepare. We also expect to publish our updated
supervisory priorities for 2023-25 in the coming weeks.
Supervisory risk outlook
Our key focus is that banks remain
resilient to the challenges stemming from the current uncertain
macro-financial environment. We collected banks’ updated capital
trajectories at the end of October to identify any vulnerabilities in
their capital adequacy to the energy shock and the heightened risk of
recession. Based on our preliminary assessment, a number of banks seem
to use relatively mild macroeconomic assumptions in their adverse
scenarios, which translates into a moderate impact on their capital
ratios. Consequently, supervisors will closely scrutinise capital
planning and challenge management actions to ensure an appropriate level
of conservatism.
Credit exposures to energy-intensive corporate
borrowers are a particular area of supervisory attention. Despite
limited signs of distress so far, many energy-intensive sectors are at
the beginning of the value chain, where disruptions can trigger chain
reactions. Since earlier this year, we have been focusing our attention
on credit and derivative exposures to the largest energy commodity
traders. We also looked at exposures to the energy utilities sector and
are keeping a close eye on developments in energy derivatives markets.
Exposures to energy utilities increased by around 14% in the first three
quarters of the year, and further credit extension might bring banks
closer to their internal risk limits. The focus on the risk management
of these exposures is particularly warranted in light of the recent
temporary relaxation of margining requirements, enabling the use of
uncollateralised bank guarantees as eligible collateral for
non-financial corporates accessing central clearing services.
The
fast-paced normalisation of interest rates is highlighting
vulnerabilities in other sectors, such as residential and commercial
real estate markets, consumer finance and leveraged finance. At an
aggregate level, leveraged finance exposures account for over 60% of
euro area banks’ Common Equity Tier 1 capital. A large share of these
are exposures to highly leveraged corporates. This is the riskiest
category of an already high-risk asset class, and banks still continue
to originate loans of this kind. We will therefore pursue targeted
follow-up. In this year’s supervisory assessment, we intend to apply
Pillar 2 capital add-ons to a handful of banks, due to substantial
deficiencies in their risk management frameworks for leveraged
transactions....
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