Each year, we collect contributions to build up the Single Resolution Fund (SRF), an emergency crisis fund that supports bank resolution. Around 3,000 banks and other financial institutions, across the 21 EU countries that make up the Banking Union, will contribute to the SRF in 2022.
The Fund
is being built up over eight years, from 2016 to 2023, and the target
must, by law, reach at least 1% of the amount of covered deposits of credit institutions in the Banking Union.
The SRB has just adopted its decision
on the calculation of the 2022 contributions, known as ex-ante
contributions. For the current year, the total amount of ex-ante
contributions to be transferred to the SRF is €13.7 billion.This
will bring the SRF to €66 billion, with a projected size of around €80
billion at the end of the transitional period in 2023. 2022 and 2023
will be the last years in which the fund is still being built up, after
which contributions should level off.
How do we work out what each bank must pay in? The way we calculate the contributions is set out clearly in the legal framework.
The individual amount each bank owes is calculated pro-rata, taking the
amount of its liabilities (excluding own funds and covered deposits),
in the context of the aggregate liabilities (excluding own funds and
covered deposits) of all the credit institutions in the Banking Union.
This is then risk-weighted using a complex methodology, which takes into
account several risk indicators.
Rising target level
The SRB sets a target level each year, in line with our legal obligation to reach the final target level by 31 December 2023. We consider several criteria – the evolution
of covered deposits, the phase of the business cycle, the possible
impact on the financial position of institutions and the obligation to
spread the contributions evenly throughout the build-up period. In 2022,
through a consultation, the SRB gave banking institutions
the opportunity to comment on the main elements of the ex-ante
calculation decision and received valuable feedback on several aspects,
including on the annual target level.
When compared to 2021, annual ex-ante
contributions have increased sizeably and it is worth analysing the
drivers for this in more detail. The main factor driving the increase in the annual target level is clearly the growth in covered deposits. After
having shown early signs of acceleration in 2018, which were confirmed
in, covered deposits have continued to display high levels of growth in
2020 and in 2021, as a result of changes in savings and consumption
behaviour related to the Covid-19 crisis. In particular, according to
the data set provided by the Deposit Guarantee Schemes (DGSs), in 2021
the average amount of covered deposits, calculated quarterly, of all
credit institutions in participating Member States amounted to €7126
billion, representing a growth of 6.5%, compared to the average amount
of covered deposits reported in 2020. In light of the above, a strong
deceleration of covered deposits growth rates in the remaining two years
of the transitional period seems unlikely. We don’t see any indicators
that would support an annual growth of covered deposits in 2022 and 2023
of less than 5%.
To be clear, the increase in amount of
ex-ante contributions does not reflect in any way an increase in the
perceived riskiness of institutions under the SRF remit, but rather
reflects the significant growth in covered deposits by the end of the
transitional period (which makes it impossible to spread out the
increase over a larger time-horizon).
What’s next
Thanks to the build-up of the SRF and once the Common Backstop
(which provides additional funding, mirroring the size of the SRF) is
finally in place, the Banking Union will increase its firepower to
manage bank failures, bringing further confidence to the system and
helping the SRB to promote financial stability and protect the taxpayer.
In 2024, the SRF will be fully mutualised and
stand at around €80 billion (1% of covered deposits), and the national
DGSs should also have reached their targets of 0.8% of covered deposits.
This means that the funds available to the Banking Union will be
comparable to those in the US
(2% of covered deposits). However, while the US has a single, central
fund, the Banking Union funds for management of bank failure are pooled
separately by both Member State and purpose.
We hope to see political agreement on the
path to a European Deposit Insurance Scheme in the coming weeks, which
would make the Banking Union financial safety net truly European.
Thought could be given to how SRF funds might be used to help start the
European Deposit Insurance Fund, to further strengthen the resilience of
the Banking Union financial safety net and reduce financial
fragmentation.
SRB
© Single Resolution Board
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