Bloomberg: Canada proposes new bail-in regulations for country's banks

16 June 2017

Canada’s department of finance proposed new rules limiting government support for potential bailouts of the nation’s banks, extending a so-called "bail-in regime" promised last year.

The government introduced in its April 2016 budget a plan to implement a bail-in regime for Canada’s "systemically important banks,” which would allow authorities to convert securities of a failing lender into common shares to recapitalize the bank and let it remain open and operating.

The rules proposed set out key features of the regime, including which type of debt instruments will be subject to the regulations. Proposals include three new regulations:

The government is seeking public comment until July 17.

Regulators worldwide have been working on similar regulations to prevent a rerun of the 2008 financial crisis, which saw the U.S., U.K. and other developed nations recapitalize failing lenders with taxpayer money to keep them from dragging down the rest of the economy -- and then face popular push-back from taxpayers.

While none of the banks in Canada’s top-rated system needed bailing out, the framework provides for such an event. It extended the Canada Deposit Insurance Corp.’s powers to temporarily control or own a systemically important bank and to convert shares and liabilities of the bank into common shares.

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