ECOFIN Council agrees general approach on Single Resolution Mechanism

18 December 2013

The Council set out its position on the establishment of a single resolution board and a single fund for the resolution of banks. It called on the presidency to start negotiations with the EP, with the aim of agreeing the SRM regulation at first reading before May 2014.

The compromise reached within the Council consists of a draft regulation on the single resolution mechanism, and a decision by euro area Member States committing them to negotiate, by 1 March 2014, an intergovernmental agreement on the functioning of the single resolution fund. This agreement, in line with terms of reference also approved today, would include arrangements for the transfer of national contributions to the fund and their progressive mutualisation over a ten-year transitional phase. It would endorse the bail-in rules established in the bank recovery and resolution directive as applicable to the use of the single fund.

The single resolution fund would be financed by bank levies raised at national level. It would initially consist of national compartments that would be gradually merged over 10 years. During this 10-year period, mutualisation between national compartments would progressively increase. So while during the first year the cost of resolving banks (after bail-in) would mainly come from the compartments of the member states where the banks are located, the share would gradually decrease as the contribution from other countries' compartments increases.

Eurogroup and ECOFIN ministers also adopted a statement on the design of a backstop to the single resolution fund. The statement specifies that during the initial build-up phase of the fund, bridge financing will be available from national sources, backed by bank levies, or from the European Stability Mechanism, according to existing procedures. Lending between national compartments would also be possible. During this transitional phase, a common backstop will be developed, which would become fully operational at the latest after 10 years. The backstop would facilitate borrowings by the fund. It would ultimately be reimbursed by the banking sector through levies, including ex-post.

The proposed single resolution mechanism (SRM) will form one of the key elements of Europe's Banking Union, along with the single supervisory mechanism (SSM) that entered into force last month. Creation of a Banking Union is essential to overcoming market fragmentation and breaking the link between sovereigns and banks.

The creation of an SRM will ensure that supervision and resolution are exercised at the same level for countries that share the supervision of banks within the SSM. This will prevent the emergence of tensions between supervision at EU level and national resolution regimes.

The SRM will cover all countries participating in the SSM, namely the euro area Member States and those non-eurozone countries that decide to join the SSM via close cooperation agreements.

The draft regulation agreed by the Council provides for a single resolution board with broad powers in cases of bank resolution. Upon notification by the European Central Bank that a bank is failing or likely to fail, or on its own initiative, the board would adopt a resolution scheme placing the bank into resolution. It would determine the application of resolution tools and the use of the single resolution fund. Decisions by the board would enter into force within 24 hours after their adoption, unless the Council, acting by simple majority on a proposal by the Commission, objects or calls for changes.

The board would consist of an executive director, four full-time appointed members and the representatives of the national resolution authorities of all the participating countries. It would exercise its tasks in either a plenary or executive format. Most draft resolution decisions would be prepared in the executive session, composed of the executive director and the appointed members, with the representatives of member states concerned by a particular resolution decision involved in a first stage.

However, the plenary session would be responsible for decisions that involve liquidity support exceeding 20 per cent of capital paid into the fund, or other forms of support, such as bank recapitalisations, exceeding 10 per cent of funds, as well as all decisions requiring access to the fund once a total of €5 billion has been used in a given calendar year. In these cases, decisions would be taken by a two-thirds majority of the board members representing at least 50 per cent of contributions.

The plenary session, voting by simple majority, would also have the right to oppose decisions by the executive session that authorise the fund to borrow, and decisions on the mutualisation of financing arrangements in the event of the resolution of a group with institutions in both SRM-participating and non-participating EU countries.

To guarantee the budgetary sovereignty of the Member States, the draft regulation prohibits decisions that would require a Member State to provide extraordinary public support without its prior approval under national budgetary procedures.

The single resolution mechanism would cover all banks in the participating Member States. The board would be responsible for the planning and resolution phases of cross-border banks and those directly supervised by the ECB, while national resolution authorities would be responsible for all other banks. However, the board would always be responsible if the resolution of a bank requires accessing the single resolution fund.

National resolution authorities would be responsible for executing bank resolution plans under the control of the single resolution board. Should a national authority not comply with its decision, the board could directly address executive orders to the troubled bank.

The SRM would enter into force on 1 January, 2015. Bail-in and resolution functions would apply from 1 January, 2016. The SRM regulation wouldn't apply before the intergovernmental agreement enters into force.

The regulation, based on article 114 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, requires a qualified majority for adoption by the Council in agreement with the European Parliament. The intergovernmental agreement would enter into force once ratified by Member States participating in the SSM/SRM that represent 80 per cent of contributions to the single resolution fund. 

Press release

Main ECOFIN results

Statement of Eurogroup and ECOFIN Ministers on the SRM-backstop

Commissioner Barnier's remarks at ECOFIN press conference, 19.12.13

Video of press conference, 19.12.13

Report on Single Resolution Mechanism and a Single Bank Resolution Fund, 20.12.13

See also:

Memo on the State of Play of the Banking Union, 17.12.13

Letter from Italian finance minister Fabrizio Saccomanni to ECOFIN president, 13.12.13


© European Council