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The ECB Regulation was approved by the ECB’s Governing Council following a public consultation, including a public hearing. The ECB has given due consideration to all feedback received during the consultation period. The comments, their assessment and the ensuing amendments to the draft ECB Regulation are published on the ECB’s banking supervision website.
The materiality threshold will comprise an absolute component, expressed as a specific maximum amount for the sum of all amounts past due owed by an obligor, and a relative component, expressed as a percentage reflecting the amount of the credit obligation past due in relation to the total amount of all on-balance sheet exposures to that obligor.
By setting a single materiality threshold, the ECB Regulation fosters a harmonised definition of default within the Single Supervisory Mechanism, thereby improving the comparability of risk-weighted assets and defaulted exposures across significant institutions. In conjunction with the European Banking Authority’s (EBA) Guidelines on the application of the definition of default, the ECB Regulation constitutes a major milestone in establishing a level playing field for the detection and treatment of obligors in financial difficulties.