Commission calls for the completion of all parts of the Banking Union by 2018

11 October 2017

European Commission plans to accelerate with the completion of the missing parts of the Banking Union in order to make European citizens and businesses benefit from deeper financial integration and a more stable financial system.

The Banking Union must be completed if it is to deliver its full potential in making the Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) more stable and resilient to shocks, while limiting the need for public risk sharing. This is beneficial for the entire Single Market. Building on the significant progress already achieved, the Commission is publishing a Communication that sets out an ambitious yet realistic path to ensure agreement on all the outstanding elements of the Banking Union, based on existing commitments by the Council. This comes ahead of the December Euro Summit, in an inclusive format, where completion of the Banking Union will be part of discussions on further deepening the EMU. Together with the Capital Markets Union (CMU), a complete Banking Union will promote a stable and integrated financial system in the EU.

In his State of the Union address, President Juncker reiterated that the Banking Union can only function if risk reduction and risk sharing go hand in hand. The Commission has already proposed measures to further reduce risk and improve risk management in banks. Last November, the Commission already presented a comprehensive risk-reduction package with changes to the banking legislation. The Commission now urges the European Parliament and the Member States to progress quickly. While recognising the current trend of declining levels of non-performing loans (NPLs), the Commission is suggesting new measures to reduce non-performing loans and to help banks diversify their investments in sovereign bonds. On the risk-sharing side, the Commission is setting out some suggestions to facilitate progress in the European Parliament and the Council on steps towards a European Deposit Insurance Scheme (EDIS), guaranteeing citizens' deposits in the Banking Union at a central level, a vital missing element of the Banking Union. The Communication also maps out rapid steps towards a last resort common fiscal backstop, committed to by Member States already in 2013, ensuring the solidity of the system and making sure that the Single Resolution Fund (SRF) has sufficient resources even in case of several simultaneous major bank resolutions.

Key features of the Communication

Press release

Full information

Fact Sheet Completing the Banking Union by 2018

Read-out of the College meeting and press conference by Vice-President Valdis DOMBROVSKIS on the Commission's Communication on the Completion of the Banking Union


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