153rd Brussels for Breakfast – CPD Notes

03 July 2019

Organised by the Centre for the Study of Financial Innovation (CSFI), and with co-presenter Simona Amati (KREAB).

This blog covers the key subjects since our last meeting that I hoped to cover but, as always, we ran out of time to deal with them all.

Highlights from the “Brussels for Breakfast” meeting

The extraordinary turns of events at the European Council’s `jobs summit” took up most of the discussion – but there were also a number of key items for EU finance.

We felt the Commission’s decision to lapse the “equivalence” of Swiss equity trading with that in the EU may have been intended to send a message to Brexit Britain. The European Council mid-June meeting rammed home the message that the Withdrawal Agreement was not open for re-negotiation but the Political Declaration on future relations certainly can be discussed.

The same Summit also laid out a strategic agenda for the incoming Commission: setting four priorities – including “building a climate-neutral, green fair and social Europe”. The green theme came across in several other items: a Commission guideline to improve how firms report climate-related information; ICMA commented on the Technical Expert Group’s green deliverables; the Bundesbank supported the Central Banks and Supervisors Network on Greening the Financial System (NGFS) and the EBA consulted on draft guidelines about loan origination that include environmental issues. The next five-year political cycles in the EU will surely be a Green one!

That was not the only pressure on banks – the EBA reported that an immediate phasing-in of all Basel III requirements would produce a €135 billion capital shortfall – concentrated among the major banks. However, if all profits were retained, the shortfall would halve… but participants were quick to point out that would make banks un-investible….


© Graham Bishop