ECB Banking Supervision exercises regulatory discretion declaring exceptional circumstances; Measure allows banks to exclude central bank exposures from leverage ratio; Banks to benefit from relief measure until 27 June 2021
The European Central Bank announced today that euro area banks under
its direct supervision may exclude certain central bank exposures from
the leverage ratio. The move is aimed at easing the implementation of
monetary policy. This decision by ECB Banking Supervision came after the Governing Council of the ECB, as monetary authority of the euro area, confirmed that there are exceptional circumstances due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
The
Capital Requirement Regulation (CRR), as amended by the CRR “quick
fix”, allows banking supervisors, after consulting the relevant central
bank, to allow banks to exclude central bank exposures from their
leverage ratio. Such assets include coins and banknotes as well as
deposits held at the central bank.
Banks can benefit from this
exclusion when they communicate their leverage ratios, a key yardstick
for investors. Based on end-March 2020 data, this exclusion would raise
the aggregate leverage ratio of 5.36% by about 0.3 percentage points.
The 3% leverage ratio requirement will become binding on 28 June 2021
but banks are already required to disclose their current leverage ratio.
This
is also important for globally systemically important banks (G-SIBs)
and subsidiaries of foreign G-SIBs, for whom the measure additionally
provides relief under the already binding total loss-absorbing capacity
(TLAC) requirement.
Banks may benefit from this measure until 27
June 2021. ECB Banking Supervision would have to take a new decision
should it wish to further extend the exclusion beyond June 2021, when
the 3% leverage ratio requirement will become binding. This would
require an upward recalibration of the 3% leverage ratio requirement.
ECB
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