ECON Committee: MEPs asked to back more transparency and regulation for shadow banking

15 November 2012

A report by Belgian Social Democrat MEP Saïd El Khadraoui calls for more transparency and regulation. MEPs will debate it in plenary on 19 November and vote on it the following day.

Need for more transparency

During the financial crisis, banks were seriously affected by their exposure to the shadow banking system and despite new legislation, MEPs are still concerned about the risks arising from the links between banks and unregulated entities. Mr El Khadraoui wrote his own-initiative report in reaction to a Commission green paper on the topic. He said shadow banking is only beneficial to the real economy if there is full transparency and risks of a systemic crisis are well managed. Therefore both monitoring and rules need to be improved.

Measures suggested by the report

The report suggests different ways to make identifying systemic risks easier:

Other suggestions in the report include imposing a maximum limit of the banks' exposure to unregulated entities to 25 per cent of own funds and requiring all shadow banking entities sponsored by or linked to a bank to appear on the bank's balance sheet. There should also be a limit on the number of times a financial product can be securitised, which means packaged into a more liquid financial product and sold to the market.

The report also calls attention to the benefits and potential risks of having both retail and investment banking under the same roof. In the report's explanatory statement, Mr El Khadraoui asked the Commission to come up with a legislative proposal for a separation of retail and investing activities of banks.

Press release

EP Audivisual: Shadow Banking - Extracts from vote on report by Säid EL KHADRAOUI (S&D, BE), 23.10.12


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