|
On the 11th of July 2016, the BCBS updated the standard for the regulatory capital treatment of Simple Transparent and Comparable (STC) securitisations, which sets the minimum risk weight for senior STC positions at 10%, and 15% for non-senior STC positions. These risk weights are the same as the outlined for STS and non-STS positions under the proposed amendments to the Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR) and are expected to enter into force in January 2018.
In November 2016, the European Commission published the CRD5/CRR2 package, which includes revisions to the Capital Requirements Directive (CRD) and to the CRR. These proposals are not securitisation specific, however there are certain aspects, such as the leverage ratio, that are relevant to securitisations.
The Trilogue negotiations between the Parliament, Council and Commission on the Prospectus Directive review started in October 2016. The political agreement on the main issues has been reached in December and the next step in the process will be to complete the necessary technical drafting. The EP and the Council final vote is expected in Q2 2017.
Trilogues on the Securitisation Package, which includes “Simple, Standard and Transparent securitisation” (STS) and a revised regulatory framework for capital charges for credit institutions and investment firms originating, sponsoring or investing in securitisation products (CRR Amendments), have begun in January 2017 under the Maltese Presidency of the EU Council. Agreement on several technical points has been achieved during the first two meetings, whereas subjects where political discussion is expected, such as risk retention, third country equivalence and hierarchy of approaches under CRR, will be resolved towards the end of the negotiation process. The Securitisation Package is expected to be finalised by the end of the Maltese Presidency (30 June 2017).
On the 8th December 2016, the ECON Committee adopted the Money Market Funds Regulation. Final adoption is scheduled for early 2017. AFME has been focused on the securitisation/ABCP aspects of the proposals and limits on MMF investments in ABS and ABCP Conduits.
Main findings in the report are: