(BRUSSELS) – The EU Commission put forward proposals Tuesday to strengthen the EU’s bank crisis management and deposit insurance (CMDI) framework, with a focus on medium-sized and smaller banks.
While the EU’s banking sector has become more resilient in recent years, many failing medium-sized and smaller banks have been managed with solutions outside the EU’s resolution framework. This, says the EU executive, sometimes involved using taxpayers’ money instead of the bank’s required internal resources or private, industry-funded safety nets (deposit guarantee schemes and resolution funds).
The new proposal will enable authorities to organise the orderly market exit for a failing bank of any size and business model, with a broad range of tools. In particular, it will facilitate the use of industry-funded safety nets to shield depositors in banking crises, such as by transferring them from an ailing bank to a healthy one. Such use of safety nets must only be a complement to the banks’ internal loss absorption capacity, which remains the first line of defence.
“This reform will improve our capacity to ensure that any bank can exit the market smoothly, irrespective of its size or business model, putting to use the tools created for this purpose,” said Financial Services Commissioner Mairead McGuinness: “This is the most efficient way to handle bank failures for our economy, taxpayers and, ultimately, financial stability. Depositors will also benefit as they would be more likely to retain uninterrupted access to their accounts.”
The proposal has the following objectives:
- Preserving financial stability and protecting taxpayers’ money: the proposal facilitates the use of deposit guarantee schemes in crisis situations to shield depositors (natural persons, businesses, public entities, etc.) from bearing losses, where this is necessary to avoid contagion to other banks and negative effects on the community and the economy. By relying on industry-funded safety nets (such as deposit guarantee schemes and resolution funds), the proposal also better protects taxpayers who do not have to step in to preserve financial stability. Deposit guarantee schemes can only be used for this purpose after banks have exhausted their internal loss absorption capacity, and only for banks that were already earmarked for resolution in the first place.
- Shielding the real economy from the impact of bank failure: the proposed rules will allow authorities to fully exploit the many advantages of resolution as a key component of the crisis management toolbox. In contrast with liquidation, resolution can be less disruptive for clients as they keep access to their accounts, for example by being transferred to another bank. Moreover, the bank’s critical functions are preserved. This benefits the economy and society, more broadly.
- Better protection for depositors: the level of coverage of 100,000 per depositor and bank, as set out in the Deposit Guarantee Scheme Directive, remains for all eligible EU depositors. However, today’s proposal harmonises further the standards of depositor protection across the EU. The new framework extends depositor protection to public entities (i.e. hospitals, schools, municipalities), as well as client money deposited in certain types of client funds (i.e. by investment companies, payment institutions, e-money institutions). The proposal includes additional measures to harmonise the protection of temporary high balances on bank accounts in excess of 100,000 linked to specific life events (such as inheritance or insurance indemnities).
The legislative package will now be discussed by the European Parliament and Council.
Reform of bank crisis management and deposit insurance framework - guide
Joint Research Center (JRC) research update on the reform of the CMDI