After closely monitoring the developments of the COVID-19
pandemic and, in particular, the impact of the second COVID-19 wave and
the related government restrictions taken in many EU countries, the
European Banking Authority (EBA) has decided to reactivate its
Guidelines on legislative and non-legislative moratoria. This
reactivation will ensure that loans, which had previously not benefitted
from payment moratoria, can now also benefit from them. The role of
banks to ensure the continued flow of lending to clients remains of
utmost importance and with the reactivation of these Guidelines, the EBA
recognises the exceptional circumstances of the second COVID-19 wave.
The EBA revised Guidelines, which will apply until 31 March 2021,
include additional safeguards against the risk of an undue increase in
unrecognised losses on banks’ balance sheet.
With the continued unfolding of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is crucial
that banks continue to provide lending to the real economy while
recognising any solvency issues in order to ensure that problematic
loans are well reflected in their balance sheets. Consequently, as part
of the re-activation of its Guidelines on legislative and
non-legislative moratoria, the EBA has introduced two new constraints to
ensure that the support provided by moratoria is limited to bridging
liquidity shortages triggered by the new lockdowns and that there are no
operational restraints on the continued availability of credit.
- Only loans that are suspended, postponed or reduced under general
payment moratoria not more than 9 months in total, including previously
granted payment holidays, can benefit from the application of the
Guidelines.
- Credit institutions are requested to document to their supervisor
their plans for assessing that the exposures subject to general payment
moratoria do not become unlikely to pay. This requirement will allow
supervisors to take any appropriate action.
The EBA is continuously monitoring the use of moratoria
and the evolution of credit quality for loans benefitting from the use
of such moratoria. Together with the inclusion of the requirement for
banks to document their plans on assessing the unlikeliness to pay of
exposures under moratoria, these measures will allow supervisors, if
necessary, to take action to ensure appropriate recognition of losses.
Furthermore, the EBA has enhanced the disclosure requirements related to the use of public moratoria and will soon release, as part of its annual EU-wide Transparency Exercise, additional information on the use of moratoria across the EU banking sector.
Background
The EBA Guidelines on legislative and non-legislative loan repayments moratoria
were published on 2 April 2020 to ensure that banks, while maintaining
comparable metrics, would be able to grant payment holidays to customers
avoiding the automatic classification of exposures under the definition
of forbearance or as defaulted under distressed restructuring. This
regulatory measure, which was triggered by the disruption caused by the
COVID-19 pandemic, acknowledged the crucial role played by banks in
supporting ongoing liquidity and the challenges faced by European
businesses.
With the unfolding of the COVID-19 pandemic, in June 2020, the EBA extended the application date of its Guidelines by three months, from 30 June to 30 September 2020, and on the 21 September, communicated its phasing-out.