Progress: Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | ECON | KARAS Othmar ( PPE) | |
Committee Opinion | JURI |
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 54
Legal Basis:
RoP 54Subjects
Events
The European Parliament adopted a resolution on Basel II and the revision of the Capital Requirements Directives (CRD 4).
The resolution welcomes the G20 commitment to increase the quality and quantity of capital and the efforts made by the Basel Committee and the Commission. It stresses however that new capital requirement rules should be drafted and implemented with care and their impacts should also be analysed in the wider regulatory overhaul framework.
In this context, Members are concerned about structural deficits and imbalances in the current proposal , as well as the risk of harming economic recovery and economic growth. In particular, it will be necessary to monitor that banks are not passing on the cost of the forthcoming proposal to end-users of financial services. Members also call on the Commission to be more pro-active in the process of reforming the Basel II rules, to actively promote and safeguard European interests, to coordinate the approaches of the Member States. The Parliament should be provided with regular reports on the status of ongoing negotiations and actively involve it in the negotiating processes.
The resolution recalls the important specificities of the European banking sector , such as the variety of business models operating under different legal forms and the fact that the European corporate sector is predominantly financed through bank lending. Members urge the Basel Committee as well as the Commission to take proper account of such specificities and of the different types of risk affecting the banking sector. They stress the need to clearly differentiate between investment and traditional retail banking services , as well as transaction services, in the revised Basel II rules.
Recalling that the Basel II Agreement, and its upcoming revision, is meant to be a global standard , Parliament is therefore very much concerned that limitations laid down in various national laws adopted in response to the crisis (in particular in the US Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, limiting recognition of external ratings) would result in a serious fragmentation of the application of this global standard.
Members deem it necessary to expand the crisis management minimum intervention toolbox available to supervisor to include at least the power to: (i) require that adjustments be made to capital, liquidity, the business mix and internal processes; (ii) recommend or impose changes of management; (iii) create a bridge bank or a good bank/bad bank split; (iv) impose profit and dividend retention requirements and restrictions in order to consolidate capital requirements and ensure that shareholders pay before taxpayers; (v) lay down criteria for valuing impaired assets.
The Commission is urged to create incentives for the banking sector to manage risk and profit with a view to long-term outcomes and to encourage banks to keep an active and ongoing interest in loans on their own books, without undue reliance on securitisation or off-balance sheet structures.
Parliament is of the view that the issue of 'too-big-to-fail' financial institutions must be addressed, and therefore that capital requirements and counter-cyclical buffers should be proportionate to the size, level of risk and business model of a financial institution.
The resolution focuses on the main issues:
Quality of capital : the resolution supports the initiative to increase the quality and level of capital in response to the crisis. However, in order to guarantee a level playing field and not to disadvantage any business models of non-joint stock companies, Members urge the Basel Committee and the Commission, when defining eligible capital instruments, to t ake proper account of the needs and particularities of non-joint stock companies (i.e. cooperatives, mutuals and savings banks), which account for a large portion of the European banking industry.
They also urge the Basel Committee and the Commission to ensure that, in consolidated capital calculations, both risk and capital are taken into account in a balanced and prudent manner, that, in particular, capital received from minorities that has been directly contributed to credit institutions within the same banking group should be appropriately recognised (i.e. minority interest), and that holdings of regional cooperative and savings banks in their central institutions are not hampered (i.e. no deduction from own funds).
The Commission is called upon to conduct a comprehensive survey of capital instruments before and after the crisis, in order to assess the importance of specific capital instruments and their relevance in a crisis situation.
Liquidity standards : Members consider developing high-quality liquidity standards to be a key part of the crisis response. Liquidity standards should be sufficiently differentiated to take account of the particularities of a bank’s business model and risk profile.
Parliament urges the Basel Committee and the Commission to reconsider the calibration of the liquidity and funding ratios .
The Commission is invited to:
make sure that, in its forthcoming proposal on the CRD 4 revision, off-balance sheet liabilities are covered by liquidity standards; define the criteria for high-quality liquid assets taking into account the definition of European Central Bank eligible assets for monetary policy operations (repo facility); include all eurozone sovereign debt as high-quality liquid assets, regardless of its specific rating.
Underlining that the likelihood that high-quality liquid assets will quickly become illiquid in times of high stress, Members call for credit institutions to conduct stress tests going beyond the liquidity coverage ratio and net stable funding ratio.
Counter-cyclical measures : Members welcome the effort to limit excessive credit growth and the risk of credit bubbles. They are concerned about the possible pro-cyclical nature of a fixed bank-specific capital conservation buffer as currently proposed. They consider that both capital conservation buffers and counter-cyclical buffers should be able to absorb losses during a period of stress. They state that in order to make the buffers effective, they should be designed and developed in parallel.
The resolution recognises the benefits of forward-looking provisioning (expected-loss approach) as a possible additional measure to reduce pro-cyclicality and encourages recognition of expected credit losses with regard to the business cycle. It calls for international convergence between reporting for accounting and reporting for regulatory purposes. It cautions about the need to minimise dual reporting.
Parliament points out that counter-cyclical regulation requires harmonised criteria in order to ensure comprehensive and careful monitoring of the financial markets and the market environment by supervisory authorities, including, amongst other things, full exchange of information, synchronisation of regulatory actions and real-time monitoring of exposure and risk.
Leverage ratio : the resolution states that such a ratio, in order to be effective, must include all off-balance sheet items and derivatives, must be clearly defined, simple and comparable internationally and should take into account regulatory netting and the different accounting standards existing internationally.
Members are concerned, however, that, taken alone, a crude leverage ratio would fail to take sufficient account of risk and would penalise entities providing traditional low-risk banking services (such as retail, corporate and real-estate financing and transaction banking services) or economies where the corporate sector is financed predominantly through lending. They are also concerned that, taken alone, a 'crude' (undifferentiated) LR might create adverse incentives to shift financial assets into more risky exposures.
Parliament favours a leverage ratio to be anchored in Pillar 1 of the Basel Committee framework and calls for further consideration to be given to alternative forms of leverage ratio in Pillar 2.
The Commission is urged to ensure that a leverage ratio does not lead to inappropriate securitisation of the kind highlighted by the financial crisis, or to substitutes and less credit, especially for lending in the real economy (these being likely ways for banks to reduce their leverage ratio).
Counterparty credit risk (CCR) : the resolution calls for enhanced standards as regards stress tests, back tests and addressing wrong-way risk, as well as assessments of long-term social and environmental risks arising from companies and projects receiving bank loans.
The Basel Committee and the Commission are invited to explore alternatives that will better address the credit value adjustment risk arising from the deterioration of the credit quality of banks’ counterparties.
Credit default swaps (CDSs) should not be used to bypass capital requirements.
The resolution calls for counterparty credit risk treatment to be risk-proportionate and for capital charges to be higher for non-centrally cleared transactions than for transactions through a central counterparty (CCP), provided that such CCPs meet high-level requirements to be defined in European legislation while taking into account standards agreed at international level.
Lastly, Members take the view that capital requirements for CCR should be stricter for exposures of financial institutions to other financial institutions and should also reflect the dynamic nature of this risk over time.
The Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs adopted the own-initiative report drafted by Othmar KARAS (EPP, AT) on Basel II and revision of the Capital Requirements Directives (CRD 4).
The report welcomes the G20 commitment to increase the quality and quantity of capital and the efforts made by the Basel Committee and the Commission. It stresses however that new capital requirement rules should be drafted and implemented with care and their impacts should also be analysed in the wider regulatory overhaul framework.
In this context, Members are concerned about structural deficits and imbalances in the current proposal , as well as the risk of harming economic recovery and economic growth;.
The report recalls the important specificities of the European banking sector , such as the variety of business models operating under different legal forms and the fact that the European corporate sector is predominantly financed through bank lending. Members urge the Basel Committee as well as the Commission to take proper account of such specificities and of the different types of risk affecting the banking sector. They stress the need to clearly differentiate between investment and traditional retail banking services , as well as transaction services, in the revised Basel II rules.
Members deem it necessary to expand the crisis management minimum intervention toolbox available to supervisor to include at least the power to: (i) require that adjustments be made to capital, liquidity, the business mix and internal processes; (ii) recommend or impose changes of management; (iii) create a bridge bank or a good bank/bad bank split; (iv) impose profit and dividend retention requirements and restrictions in order to consolidate capital requirements and ensure that shareholders pay before taxpayers; (v) lay down criteria for valuing impaired assets.
The committee urges the Commission to create incentives for the banking sector to manage risk and profit with a view to long-term outcomes and to encourage banks to keep an active and ongoing interest in loans on their own books, without undue reliance on securitisation or off-balance sheet structures.
The Commission is urged to intensify its transatlantic financial regulatory dialogue with the US.
The report calls on the Commission to be more pro-active in the process of reforming the Basel II rules, to actively promote and safeguard European interests.
Members recall the need to involve the European Parliament in the negotiations, and urge the Commission and the Basel Committee to take the necessary steps to involve it on a permanent base.
The report focuses on the main issues:
Quality of capital : the report supports the initiative to increase the quality and level of capital in response to the crisis. However, in order to guarantee a level playing field and not to disadvantage any business models of non-joint stock companies, Members urge the Basel Committee and the Commission, when defining eligible capital instruments, to t ake proper account of the needs and particularities of non-joint stock companies (i.e. cooperatives, mutuals and savings banks), which account for a large portion of the European banking industry.
They also urge the Basel Committee and the Commission to ensure that, in consolidated capital calculations, both risk and capital are taken into account in a balanced and prudent manner, that, in particular, capital received from minorities that has been directly contributed to credit institutions within the same banking group should be appropriately recognised (i.e. minority interest), and that holdings of regional cooperative and savings banks in their central institutions are not hampered (i.e. no deduction from own funds).
The Commission is called upon to conduct a comprehensive survey of capital instruments before and after the crisis, in order to assess the importance of specific capital instruments and their relevance in a crisis situation.
Liquidity standards : Members consider developing high-quality liquidity standards to be a key part of the crisis response. Liquidity standards should be sufficiently differentiated to take account of the particularities of a bank’s business model and risk profile.
Member urge the Basel Committee and the Commission to reconsider the calibration of the liquidity and funding ratios .
The Commission is invited to:
make sure that, in its forthcoming proposal on the CRD 4 revision, off-balance sheet liabilities are covered by liquidity standards; define the criteria for high-quality liquid assets taking into account the definition of European Central Bank eligible assets for monetary policy operations (repo facility); include all eurozone sovereign debt as high-quality liquid assets, regardless of its specific rating.
Underlining that the likelihood that high-quality liquid assets will quickly become illiquid in times of high stress, Members call for credit institutions to conduct stress tests going beyond the liquidity coverage ratio and net stable funding ratio.
Counter-cyclical measures : Members welcome the effort to limit excessive credit growth and the risk of credit bubbles. They are concerned about the possible pro-cyclical nature of a fixed bank-specific capital conservation buffer as currently proposed. They consider that both capital conservation buffers and counter-cyclical buffers should be able to absorb losses during a period of stress. They state that in order to make the buffers effective, they should be designed and developed in parallel.
The report recognises the benefits of forward-looking provisioning (expected-loss approach) as a possible additional measure to reduce pro-cyclicality and encourages recognition of expected credit losses with regard to the business cycle. It calls for international convergence between reporting for accounting and reporting for regulatory purposes. It cautions about the need to minimise dual reporting.
The committee points out that counter-cyclical regulation requires harmonised criteria in order to ensure comprehensive and careful monitoring of the financial markets and the market environment by supervisory authorities, including, amongst other things, full exchange of information, synchronisation of regulatory actions and real-time monitoring of exposure and risk.
Leverage ratio : the report states that such a ratio, in order to be effective, must include all off-balance sheet items and derivatives, must be clearly defined, simple and comparable internationally and should take into account regulatory netting and the different accounting standards existing internationally.
Members are concerned, however, that, taken alone, a crude leverage ratio would fail to take sufficient account of risk and would penalise entities providing traditional low-risk banking services (such as retail, corporate and real-estate financing and transaction banking services) or economies where the corporate sector is financed predominantly through lending. They are also concerned that, taken alone, a 'crude' (undifferentiated) LR might create adverse incentives to shift financial assets into more risky exposures.
The committee favours a leverage ratio to be anchored in Pillar 1 of the Basel Committee framework and calls for further consideration to be given to alternative forms of leverage ratio in Pillar 2.
The Commission is urged to ensure that a leverage ratio does not lead to inappropriate securitisation of the kind highlighted by the financial crisis, or to substitutes and less credit, especially for lending in the real economy (these being likely ways for banks to reduce their leverage ratio).
Counterparty credit risk (CCR) : the report calls for enhanced standards as regards stress tests, back tests and addressing wrong-way risk, as well as assessments of long-term social and environmental risks arising from companies and projects receiving bank loans.
The Basel Committee and the Commission are invited to explore alternatives that will better address the credit value adjustment risk arising from the deterioration of the credit quality of banks’ counterparties.
Credit default swaps (CDSs) should not be used to bypass capital requirements.
The report calls for counterparty credit risk treatment to be risk-proportionate and for capital charges to be higher for non-centrally cleared transactions than for transactions through a central counterparty (CCP), provided that such CCPs meet high-level requirements to be defined in European legislation while taking into account standards agreed at international level.
Lastly, Members take the view that capital requirements for CCR should be stricter for exposures of financial institutions to other financial institutions and should also reflect the dynamic nature of this risk over time.
Documents
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2011)94
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament: T7-0354/2010
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading: A7-0251/2010
- Committee report tabled for plenary: A7-0251/2010
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE442.841
- Committee draft report: PE441.366
- Committee draft report: PE441.366
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE442.841
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading: A7-0251/2010
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2011)94
Activities
- Isabelle DURANT
Plenary Speeches (2)
- Sharon BOWLES
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Antonio CANCIAN
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Giovanni COLLINO
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Diogo FEIO
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Vicky FORD
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Jean-Paul GAUZÈS
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Jiří HAVEL
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Wolf KLINZ
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Olle LUDVIGSSON
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Petru Constantin LUHAN
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Astrid LULLING
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Sławomir NITRAS
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Anni PODIMATA
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Olle SCHMIDT
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Czesław Adam SIEKIERSKI
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Angelika WERTHMANN
Plenary Speeches (1)
Amendments | Dossier |
258 |
2010/2074(INI)
2010/06/15
ECON
258 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Motion for a resolution Citation 5 – having regard to the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision's consultative document on strengthening the resilience of the banking sector4
Amendment 10 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A a (new) Aa. whereas, there will be no European recovery, new jobs and investments if European financial markets are not able to increase lending to the private sector,
Amendment 100 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 a (new) 13a. Deems it vital that the EU should take into account in the definition of new rules threats to the structural diversity of its financial sector and believes that the European economy needs a sound network of neighbourhood banks;
Amendment 101 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 b (new) 13b. Proposes that the Basel Committee, the International Organisation of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) etc. should be incorporated into a global structure – possibly the IMF – in order to establish proper organisation of the world of finance and to ensure that all stakeholders are involved in drawing up the rules and that there is sufficient capacity for checking that they are implemented;
Amendment 102 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 a (new) 13a. Stresses the need to shrink "too big to fail" financial institutions through the use of reserve and capital requirements scaled to the size, of the firm the firm, tax incentives, antitrust laws, an absolute cap on the balance sheet or other mechanisms;
Amendment 103 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 b (new) 13b. Urges the Commission to support narrow banking, by requiring less stringent capital requirements for retail banks that finance the real economy; deems that new capital requirements should not generate additional costs for these institutions;
Amendment 104 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Supports the initiative to increase the quality and level of capital in response to the crisis; underlines that the primary purpose of capital is to absorb unexpected losses, particularly in times of stress, and tier 1 capital definitions must exclude instruments that are not truly loss absorbing (for example where they may not be realised or are transient);
Amendment 105 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Supports the initiative to increase the quality and level of capital in response to the crisis; recalls that this issue is intimately linked to accounting rules thus implying a consistent approach, having in mind as well global convergence;
Amendment 106 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 a (new) 14a. Calls on the simplification of the structure of the own capital in order to increase transparency. Accordingly, the Tier 3 class in the definition of core capital should be eliminated, whilst upper and lower division of Tier 2 class should be assimilated into a unique class. The capital instruments of savings banks and cooperatives should be recognised as eligible instruments of own capital since they dispose of the same loss-absorbance features as their banking counterparts;
Amendment 107 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 a (new) 14a. Calls on the Commission and Basel Committee to reconsider the scope of the deduction of investments in financial institutions to avoid serious unintended impacts which would prevent market making and liquidity in financial services shares;
Amendment 108 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 b (new) 14b. Is concerned about the pro-cyclical effects of deducting Deferred Tax Assets (DTAs) from Tier 1 capital, particularly DTAs based on timing differences between tax and accounting systems;
Amendment 109 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15.
Amendment 11 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B B. whereas prudential standards must be strengthened and shortcomings concerning the quality and amount of capital, liquidity management, self regulation through internal models and the pro-cyclical nature of Basel II and the CRD that have been revealed by the crisis must be addressed,
Amendment 110 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Is of the view that, in order to guarantee a level playing field and in order not to
Amendment 111 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Is of the view that, in order not to disadvantage certain business models of non-joint stock companies, in particular cooperatives, mutuals and savings banks, capital must be defined in a balanced manner on the basis of the quality of capital instruments (i.e. permanence, loss absorbance, flexibility of payment) rather than their particular legal form;
Amendment 112 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission, when defining open catalogue of eligible capital instruments, to take proper account of the needs and particularities of non-joint stock companies (i.e. cooperatives and savings banks), which account for a large portion
Amendment 113 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission, when defining eligible capital instruments, to take proper account of the needs and particularities of non-joint stock companies (i.e. cooperatives, mutuals and savings banks), which account for a large portion of the European banking industry;
Amendment 114 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission, when defining eligible capital instruments, to take proper account of the needs and particularities of non-joint stock companies (i.e. cooperatives, mutuals and savings banks), which account for a large portion of the European banking industry;
Amendment 115 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission, when defining eligible capital instruments, to take proper account of the needs and particularities of non-joint stock companies (i.e. cooperatives, mutuals and savings banks), which account for a large portion of the European banking industry;
Amendment 116 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 a (new) 16a. Stresses that a grandfathering clause up to 10 years for own funds instruments which are recognised as such under the current rules should be established in order to give institutions time to adjust to the new conditions and to avoid provoking friction in lending;
Amendment 117 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 b (new) 16b. Urges the Commission to review the proposed eligibility criteria for core tier 1 capital and restrict the catalogue to those requirements which are necessary to ensure the quality of capital (i.e. permanence, loss absorbance, flexibility of payment; underlines that the treatment of coupons and dividends is not relevant for the quality of capital and therefore supports the Commission not to consider additional eligibility requirements in relation to the treatment of capital instruments;
Amendment 118 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 a (new) 16a. Urges the Commission to review the proposed eligibility criteria for core tier 1 capital and restrict the catalogue to those criteria which are necessary to ensure the quality of capital (i.e. permanence, loss absorbance, flexibility of payment);
Amendment 119 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 b (new) 16b. Stresses that the tax treatment of coupons and dividends is not relevant for defining the quality of capital; calls therefore on the Commission to abstain from additional eligibility criteria in relation to the tax treatment of hybrid instruments;
Amendment 12 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B a (new) Ba. whereas self regulation has led to an underestimation of risk exposure of financial institutions in general and banks in particular,
Amendment 120 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 c (new) 16c. Asks the Commission to review the proposed prudential filters and deductions such as the treatment of deferred tax assets and minority interests;
Amendment 121 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 d (new) 16d. Urges the Commission to take into account the already tightened standards for both, core and non core Tier 1 capital when calibrating the predominant part of Tier 1 capital, and that an additional increase of the limit is not deemed necessary;
Amendment 122 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission to ensure that, in consolidated
Amendment 123 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission to ensure that, in consolidated capital calculations, both risk and capital are taken into account in a balanced manner
Amendment 124 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission to ensure that, in consolidated capital calculations, both risk and capital are taken into account in a balanced manner (i.e. minority interest); understands that the objective is to prevent artificially high minority stakes in low risk subsidiaries. Proposes the recognition of full Risk Weighted Assets (RWA), with minority interest being included in regulatory capital up to a ceiling based on a) the overall group capital ratio, or b) a pre-determined regulatory ratio. To the extent that the minority interest exceeds the threshold, the excess would not be available for regulatory capital recognition;
Amendment 125 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission to ensure that, in consolidated capital calculations, both risk and capital are taken into account in a balanced manner and that particular capital received from minorities directly contributed to credit institutions within the same banking group should be appropriately recognized (i.e. minority interest);
Amendment 126 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission to ensure that, in consolidated capital calculations, both risk and capital are taken into account in a balanced manner (i.e. minority interest); and the holdings of regional cooperative and savings banks in their central institution are not hampered (i.e. no deduction from own funds);
Amendment 127 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 a (new) 17a. Emphasises the important role contingent capital played during the crisis; calls on the Commission and Basel Committee to recognise the role of flexible contingent capital in crisis situations and to monitor market acceptance of convertible instruments;
Amendment 128 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 b (new) 17b. Urges the Commission and Basel Committee to reconsider the role of hybrid capital in Tier 1 capital given the need for a broader investor base, and the already strict regulatory criteria around approval for exercising a call right in “innovative hybrids”;
Amendment 129 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 18 18. Calls on the Commission to take proper
Amendment 13 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B b (new) Bb. whereas new capital requirements must be scrutinized according to external risk assessments by supervisory authorities, as banks have a strong incentive not to reveal their true risk exposures,
Amendment 130 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 18 a (new) 18a. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission, when defining the treatment for holdings in financial sector entities, to take proper account the specifics of the European banc assurance model, that has demonstrated its resilience during the financial crisis, and calls the Basel Committee attention to the European Financial Conglomerates Regulation, that has proven to be an efficient framework to avoid double counting of capital;
Amendment 131 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 18 b (new) 18b. Asks the Basel Committee and the Commission to better define the treatment of reciprocal financial cross holding agreements to avoid the excessive penalization for the growth of European Banks in emerging markets and de- coupled economies (ex: Africa and Latin America);
Amendment 132 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 18 c (new) 18c. Calls on the Commission to take proper account of the differences in pension models across countries in order to assure a level playing field and to develop volatility and pro-cyclicality dampening mechanisms for capital requirements related to pension funds;
Amendment 133 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 18 d (new) 18d. Asks for the Commission to consider a balanced treatment between unrealized gains and losses, in order to contain volatility and pro-cyclicality;
Amendment 134 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 18 a (new) Amendment 135 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19. Considers developing high quality liquidity standards to be a key part of the crisis response; however, is concerned that economic repercussions of not getting the liquidity elements of the framework right are far higher than for the capital elements and calls on the Commission and Basel Committee to be cautious in the timing and the harmonised implementation of the framework;
Amendment 136 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19. Considers developing high quality liquidity standards to be a key part of the crisis response but acknowledges that liquidity standards should instead of implementing a one size fits all regime take into account the particularities of a bank’s business model and their risk profile;
Amendment 137 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19. Considers developing high quality liquidity standards to be a key part of the crisis response, but recommends more flexibility in implementation to account for firm specific factors, i.e. through supervisory dialogue;
Amendment 138 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19. Considers developing higher quality liquidity standards to be a key part of the crisis response;
Amendment 139 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19. Considers developing high quality liquidity standards to be a key part of the crisis response
Amendment 14 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B c (new) Bc. whereas it is necessary to expand the crisis management minimum intervention toolbox available to supervisors,
Amendment 140 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 a (new) 19a. Stresses that such standards should be based on the underlying fundamental factors and risks, recognising that the same type of bond (i.e. government-, corporate- and mortgage bonds etc.) has different risks and liquidity measures because the underlying debt exposures vary considerably;
Amendment 141 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 a (new) 19a. Notes that maturity transformation inherently exposes banks to long/short liquidity risk;
Amendment 142 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 a (new) 19a. Is of the view that, in order not to disadvantage banks recognized as financial conglomerates which hold a participation in insurance companies, the double counting of own funds between banks and insurance companies must be addressed under the current regime of the financial conglomerate directive;
Amendment 143 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 a (new) 19a. Urges the Basel Committee and Commission to reconsider the calibration of the liquidity and funding ratios; is concerned that the level of conservatism and proposed calibration of the proposed liquidity framework will significantly reduce banks’ ability to perform maturity transformation and would require an excessive increase in banks’ liquidity buffers in Europe;
Amendment 144 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 a (new) 19a. Calls the attention, however, to the fact that liquidity requires a dynamic measurement, and standards should only be used as a complement to a wider set of measures and pieces of information;
Amendment 145 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 b (new) 19b. Calls on the Commission to carefully consider the impact on forthcoming regulations from including the liquidity standards under Pillar 1;
Amendment 146 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Is of the view that a
Amendment 147 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Is of the view that a
Amendment 148 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Is of the view that a "liquidity coverage ratio" should take greater account of the risk of concentration of eligible assets in any liquidity buffer, encourage diversification and discourage excessive concentration into one particular asset class; maintains that a cross-border framework for holding liquidity buffers centrally and centralised reporting to the home regulator is essential for efficient liquidity management;
Amendment 149 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Is of the view that a
Amendment 15 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B d (new) Bd. whereas a clear separation or firewalling between retail and investment banking must be strived for in order to make sure insured deposits are not used as collateral for trading activities,
Amendment 150 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Is of the view that a "liquidity coverage ratio" should take greater account of the risk of concentration of eligible assets in any liquidity buffer, encourage diversification and discourage excessive concentration into one particular asset class; underlines that this ratio, when properly designed will improve institutions’ resilience to liquidity risk;
Amendment 151 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Is of the view that a "liquidity coverage ratio" should take greater account of the risk of concentration of eligible assets in any liquidity buffer, encourage diversification on available high quality assets (e.g. covered bonds) in the relevant markets or currency areas and discourage excessive concentration into one particular asset class;
Amendment 152 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Is of the view that a "liquidity coverage ratio" should
Amendment 153 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Is of the view that a "liquidity coverage ratio" should take greater account of the risk of concentration of eligible assets in any liquidity buffer, encourage diversification in terms of assets allowing Eurosystem eligibility and discourage excessive
Amendment 154 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Is of the view that a "liquidity coverage ratio" should take greater account of the risk of concentration of eligible assets, including deposits kept by cooperative banks, in any liquidity buffer, encourage diversification and discourage excessive concentration into one particular asset class;
Amendment 155 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 a (new) 20a. Expresses strong concerns regarding the one-year liquidity standard (“net stable funding ratio”), notably for the financing of SMEs and Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission to replace it by more proportionate means to address excessive transformation;
Amendment 156 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 a (new) 20a. Is of the view that the definition of the buffer should also include a wider range of liquid assets that conforms with definitions of the Basel Committee and other central banks. It is evident that both the market and the rating agencies regard a wider range of assets with sufficient liquidity characteristics as that is significantly different from other debt instruments and as secure for collateral purposes;
Amendment 157 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 a (new) 20a. Is concerned about the unintended consequences likely to arise from the requirement to hold high levels of government bonds;
Amendment 158 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 a (new) 20a. Calls on the Commission to ensure that the proposed liquidity standards will not undermine Banks' and more particularly medium and small banks' crucial role of financial intermediation;
Amendment 159 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 b (new) 20b. Urges the Commission to make sure that appropriate liquidity standards are applied to all financial institutions, including investment firms investing funds on behalf of their clients;
Amendment 16 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B e (new) Be. whereas new standards must be adjusted according to the size of banks as well as their business profile,
Amendment 160 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 c (new) 20c. Calls on the Commission, to make sure that in its forthcoming proposal on the CRD IV revision, off-balance sheet liabilities are covered by liquidity standards;
Amendment 161 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 a (new) 20a. Is of the view that the run-off factors proposed by the LCR should be calibrated in a more granular way in order to reflect the operational, legal and economic characteristics of banking products and services, e.g. the custodian banks’ activity related to the investment funds and the covered bonds;
Amendment 162 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21. Calls, in the event of any structural liquidity standard being set, for proper recognition of stable sources of funding specific to Europe (
Amendment 163 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21. Calls, in the event of any structural liquidity standard being set, for proper
Amendment 164 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21. Calls, in the event of any structural liquidity standard being set, for a comprehensive impact assessment as well as for proper recognition of stable sources of funding specific to Europe (i.e. real- estate financing);
Amendment 165 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 a (new) 21a. Urges the Commission to define the criteria for high quality liquid assets in accordance with the current definition of European Central Bank Eligible assets for monetary policy operations (repo facility). In particular, highly rated securitization and covered bonds eligible for ECB repo facility resulting from bank’s lending activity to households and SME’s, should be accepted for the liquidity buffer;
Amendment 166 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 b (new) 21b. Urges the Commission to include all Euro zone sovereign debt as high quality liquid assets regardless its specific rating, reducing the disproportional impact of rating agencies actions;
Amendment 167 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 c (new) 21c. Calls on the Commission to analyze the inherent inconsistencies of the “Net Stable Funding Ratio” (NSFR) given the underlying scenarios assumed by the ratio;
Amendment 168 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 a (new) 21a. Draws attention however to the likelihood that high quality liquid assets can become promptly illiquid in times of crisis and insists that such type of ratio should be integrated as a factor in stress tests together with a net stable funding requirement (NSFR);
Amendment 169 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 Amendment 17 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C a (new) Ca. whereas it should be noted that banking sector in the Central and Eastern European countries performed well during the crisis time. However, it should also be borne in mind that the volume of the liquidity provided by parent banks to subsidiaries declined significantly after the outbreak of the crisis due to the marked increase of costs of liquidity. The impacts on the banking profitability of lower volume of lending in the current economic downturn, of the future set-up of banking resolution fund funded from the levies imposed on banks should also be duly considered upon discussing the planned restrictions in the capital- and liquidity conditions under CRD IV,
Amendment 170 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 Amendment 171 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Is concerned
Amendment 172 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Is concerned about the
Amendment 173 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23.
Amendment 174 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Is concerned about the pro-cyclical nature of a fixed bank-specific capital conservation buffer; calls on the Commission and Basel Committee to consider the possibility of introducing market-related capital requirements so as to achieve a counter-cyclical effect under the CRD; calls on the Commission in particular to consider the possibility of moving from individual to consolidated risk assessment;
Amendment 175 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Is concerned about the pro-cyclical nature of a fixed bank-specific capital conservation buffer, notes that present capital requirement rules are designed in a way that contributed to systemic risks during the crisis;
Amendment 176 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Is concerned about the pro-cyclical nature of a fixed bank-specific capital conservation buffer and is concerned about the need to ensure that such a buffer does not double count, and that it is able to be used and drawn down in periods of downturn/stress;
Amendment 177 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 a (new) 23a. Underlines the need for future rules to be truly risk based and being designed in a way that awards procyclical behaviour;
Amendment 178 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 24 24. Welcomes the attempt to identify a set of macro-economic variables in order to build efficient counter-cyclical buffers; it should be noted that if the quantity of the own capital falls short of the sum of the capital requirement and the counter- cyclical capital buffers, the supervisory authorities should be able to restrict the distribution of dividend payments, share buybacks and discretionary bonus payments to staff. The formulation of the anti-cyclical capital buffers should be based basically on the "output gap" which is the best metric of the cyclical economic performance. The introduction of counter-cyclical capital buffer is a simple and feasible approach to reduce cyclicality of the regulatory capital requirements;
Amendment 179 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 24 24. Welcomes the attempt to identify a set of harmonized macro-economic variables in order to build efficient counter-cyclical buffers;
Amendment 18 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas
Amendment 180 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 24 a (new) 24a. Is of the view that counter-cyclical capital buffers would be ineffective to dampen the capital requirement pro- cyclicality with regards to market pressure to keep high levels of capital and redundant with through-the-cycle credit risk provisioning;
Amendment 181 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 25 25.
Amendment 182 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 25 25. Recognises the benefits of
Amendment 183 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 25 25. Recognises the benefits of through-the- cycle provisioning (expected loss approach) as a possible measure to reduce pro-cyclicality and encourage recognition
Amendment 184 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 25 25. Recognises the benefits of through-the- cycle provisioning (expected loss approach) as a possible additional measure to reduce pro-cyclicality and encourage recognition of expected credit losses with regard to the business cycle;
Amendment 185 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 25 – point a (new) a) Deems that the forthcoming European Banking Authority should play a leading role for the definition and the implementation of measures related to capital requirements and counter-cyclical capital buffers' standards at the EU level;
Amendment 186 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 Amendment 187 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 26. Calls for convergence between reporting for accounting and reporting for regulatory purposes, in particular as regards an expected loss approach in disclosed profit, to take account of the lessons learned from the crisis and ensure that the same set of clear and transparent rules are used when generating information for supervisors and investors; cautions about the ne
Amendment 188 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 26. Calls for international convergence between reporting for accounting and reporting for regulatory purposes, in particular as regards an expected loss approach in disclosed profit, to take account of the lessons learned from the crisis and ensure that the same set of clear and transparent rules are used when generating information for supervisors and investors; cautions about the negative impact of dual reporting;
Amendment 189 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 a (new) 26a. Stresses the importance to introduce counter-cyclical capital requirements which would allow regulators to require banks to increase their minimum capital requirements in the view of the bank's individual exposure to emerging risks or to lower their minimum capital requirements during periods of prolonged lending and investment droughts or asset price deflation;
Amendment 19 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D a (new) Da. whereas Europe applies the CRD to a wider range of financial institutions than other countries which should be addressed to ensure compatibility, at least by proportionate implementation,
Amendment 190 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 b (new) 26b. Points out that counter-cyclical regulation requires harmonised criteria to ensure a comprehensive and careful monitoring of the financial markets and the market environment by supervisory authorities, including amongst others full exchange of information, synchronisation of regulatory actions as well as real time monitoring of exposures and risk including through a requirements for audit trails on all financial market transactions;
Amendment 191 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 Amendment 192 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 27.
Amendment 193 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 27. Notes the concept of a
Amendment 194 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 27. Notes the concept of a "crude" LR as a possible backstop against building excessive leverage
Amendment 195 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 27. Notes the concept of a ‘crude’ LR as a possible backstop against building excessive leverage,
Amendment 196 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 27. Notes the concept of a
Amendment 197 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 27. Notes the concept of a "crude" LR as a possible backstop against building excessive leverage, but has strong concerns about its added value and about its potential interaction with other prudential measures like the new liquidity rules;
Amendment 198 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 27. Notes the concept of a ‘crude’ LR as a possible backstop against building excessive leverage, but can find no evidence of a LR that has prevented excess leverage in other jurisdictions, and has strong concerns about its added value;
Amendment 199 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 27. Notes the concept of a "crude" LR as a possible backstop against building excessive leverage, but has strong concerns about its added value and its eventual inclusion under Pillar 1;
Amendment 2 #
Motion for a resolution Citation 5 a (new) – having regard to the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision’s consultative document on an international framework for liquidity risk measurement, standards and monitoring5,
Amendment 20 #
Motion for a resolution Recital E E. whereas there are important European specificities, such as the fact that the corporate sector in Europe is predominantly financed through bank lending which should be more targeted to specialised fields such as SME lending with larger companies encouraged to issue bonds directly to investors; whereas the revised Basel rules must take due account of such specificities,
Amendment 200 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 Amendment 201 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Is of the view that such a ratio, in order to be effective, must
Amendment 202 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Is of the view that such a ratio, in order
Amendment 203 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Is of the view that such a ratio, in order to be effective, must comprise off-balance sheet items and derivatives, must be clearly defined, simple and comparable internationally and should take into account the different leverage ratios existing internationally and should recognise in its calculation netting arrangements (of derivatives and repo and securities transactions) as well as the benefits of financial collateral and hedging. The Leverage Ratio whilst comprising off-balance sheet items should not unduly penalise unconditional commitments or trade finance activity which should be calculated at much lower conversion factors, than the suggested 100 per cent as outlined in the Basel Committee proposals;
Amendment 204 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Is of the view that such a ratio, in order to be effective, must comprise off-balance sheet items and derivatives, take account of appropriate netting, hedging and collateral arrangements, must be clearly defined, simple and comparable internationally and should take into account the different leverage ratios existing internationally;
Amendment 205 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Is of the view that such a ratio, in order to be effective, must comprise off-balance sheet items and derivatives, must be clearly defined, simple and comparable internationally and should take into account the different leverage ratios existing internationally; takes the view that, in principle, leverage ratios should be incorporated in Pillar 1 of Basel II; r. ro
Amendment 206 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Is of the view that such a ratio, in order to be effective, must comprise off-balance sheet items and derivatives, must be clearly
Amendment 207 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Is of the view that such a ratio, in order to be effective, must comprise off-balance sheet items and derivatives, must be clearly defined, simple and comparable internationally and should take into account the different leverage ratios and accounting standards existing internationally;
Amendment 208 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 a (new) 28a. Is of the view that if a leverage ratio is introduced the rules should not stipulate an appropriate level of the ratio. The measure should be used in dialogue with the financial institutions; , i.e. through supervisory dialogue;
Amendment 209 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 a (new) 28a. Is concerned that the current proposals ignore commonly applied netting rules and consequently greatly exaggerate the asset side of the balance sheet for many banks creating an unlevel playing field;
Amendment 21 #
Motion for a resolution Recital E a (new) Ea. whereas the CRD assumes that there is no nominal credit risk for Eurozone state debt, even though the Eurozone can not create a currency in which they borrow (i.e. states can not print currency),
Amendment 210 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 a (new) 28a. Considers that use of the leverage ratio, coupled with risk-based capital requirements, will contain both individual and systemic balance-sheet expansion;
Amendment 211 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Is
Amendment 212 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29.
Amendment 213 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Is, however, concerned that a crude LR may penalise entities providing traditional low
Amendment 214 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Is, however, concerned that a crude LR may penalise entities providing traditional low-risk banking services (such as corporate and real-estate financing) or economies where the corporate sector is financed predominantly through lending, therefore proposes a solution where the leverage ratio is part of the Pillar 2 framework;
Amendment 215 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Is, however, concerned that a crude LR
Amendment 216 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Is, however, concerned that a crude LR may penalise local authorities, public corporations and entities providing traditional low-risk banking services (such as corporate financing) or economies where the corporate sector is financed predominantly through lending;
Amendment 217 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Is, however, concerned that a crude LR may penalise entities providing traditional low-risk and liquid banking services (such as retail, corporate and real-estate financing as well as transaction banking services) or economies where the corporate sector is financed predominantly through lending;
Amendment 218 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Is, however, concerned that a crude LR
Amendment 219 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 a (new) 29a. Stresses in this context that a "crude" (undifferentiated) LR promotes the danger of regulatory capital arbitrage by shifting financial assets into more risky exposures;
Amendment 22 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F F. whereas a "one size fits all" approach is
Amendment 220 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 a (new) 29a. Urges the Commission and Basel Committee to avoid setting a specific timeframe for migration of the leverage ratio to Pillar 1 from Pillar 2 so that the potential effects of that move can be monitored through a sufficiently long period in the economic cycle;
Amendment 221 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 a (new) 29a. Asks the Basel Committee and the Commission to assess properly leverage ratios options applicable to Tier 1 and Tier 2 taking into account specificities of the EU banking industry;
Amendment 222 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Asks the Basel Committee and the Commission to
Amendment 223 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Asks the Basel Committee
Amendment 224 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Asks the Basel Committee and the Commission to explore
Amendment 225 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Asks the Basel Committee and the Commission to explore alternatives to a crude LR, such as the possibility of setting backstop limits for business lines, RWAs and portfolios providing that due care and supervision are given to their classification; believes that the measurement of assets as either net or gross amounts should be considered in this context;
Amendment 226 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Asks the Basel Committee and the Commission to explore alternatives to a
Amendment 227 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 a (new) 30a. Further asks the Basel Committee and the Commission to explore proportionality within a crude LR through the use of threshold triggers for regulatory intervention;
Amendment 228 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 – point a (new) a) Favours a leverage ratio to be anchored in Pillar I of the Basel Committee framework;
Amendment 229 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 – point b (new) b) Notes the leverage ratio as a necessary tool to measure banks' total exposure, but urges the Commission to device regulatory tools aiming at limiting effectively excessive leverage (in particular, excessive reliance on short- term and wholesale funding);
Amendment 23 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F F. whereas a "one size fits all" approach without taking into consideration banks’ specific risk profile is detrimental to the European banking industry and consequently may harm economic growth and economic recovery,
Amendment 230 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 a (new) 30a. Calls for an additional consideration of alternative forms of Leverage Ratio in Pillar 2; points out that a Leverage Ratio could for example have a flexible margin and supervisory authorities would have the discretion to act upon the breach of the limit;
Amendment 231 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Urges the Commission to ensure that a leverage ratio does not lead to excessive securitisation
Amendment 232 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Urges the Commission to ensure that a leverage ratio does not lead to
Amendment 233 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Urges the Commission to ensure that a leverage ratio does not lead to excessive use
Amendment 234 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Urges the Commission to ensure that a leverage ratio does not lead to excessive securitisation, which played an important role in provoking the financial crisis, and less credit (these being likely ways for banks to reduce their leverage ratio);
Amendment 235 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Urges the Commission to ensure that, in the context of economic recovery, a leverage ratio does not lead to excessive securitisation and less credit (these being likely ways for banks to reduce their leverage ratio);
Amendment 236 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 a (new) 31a. Reminds the Commission that decreased lending would reduce growth and could create new risks and undermine the stability of European economies;
Amendment 237 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 a (new) 31a. Is deeply concerned that the current design of the proposals around the capital charges for credit valuation adjustments (CVA) would have a severe impact on SMEs in Europe because of the limitation of hedging recognition to liquid hedges;
Amendment 238 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 a (new) 31a. Notes that the possible negative interplay between different measures, especially with the proposed leverage ratio and liquidity rules, should be carefully considered and calls for a comprehensive impact analysis which examines the potential effects of the leverage ratio requirement on the financial institutions´ business models and on national financial sectors;
Amendment 239 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 32.
Amendment 24 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F a (new) Fa. whereas, the main problems of the European banking sector was not lack of solvency but the lack of liquidity, confidence combined with falling asset prices,
Amendment 240 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 32. Calls for enhanced standards as regards stress-tests, back-tests and addressing wrong-way risk as well as assessments of long-term social and environmental risks arising from companies and projects receiving bank loans;
Amendment 241 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 32. Calls for enhanced standards as regards stress-tests, back-tests and addressing wrong-way risk as well as increased assessments of social and environmental risks of companies that receive bank loans;
Amendment 242 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 a (new) 32a. Urges the Basel Committee and the Commission to explore alternatives to better address the credit value adjustment risk owing to the deterioration in the credit quality of banks’ counterparties;
Amendment 243 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 a (new) 32a. Calls for additional capital requirements for lending related to derivative instruments especially for OTC transactions;
Amendment 244 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 a (new) 32a. Consider that Credit Default Swaps (CDS) should not be used in order to bypass capital requirements;
Amendment 245 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 33 33. Call for very high capital requirements for lending related to food and other commodity derivatives due to the negative social and environmental effects of speculation in commodity derivatives that are often financed through loans; call for different capital treatment for an OTC transaction and a transaction through a central counterparty (CCP) through which all hedging activities should take place, provided that the CCP meets high
Amendment 246 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 33 33. Calls for
Amendment 247 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 33 33. Call for different capital treatment for an OTC transaction and a transaction through a central counterparty (CCP), provided that the CCP meets high-level requirements to be defined in European legislation while taking into account standards agreed at international level
Amendment 248 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 33 33. Call for different capital treatment for an OTC transaction and a transaction through a central counterparty (CCP), provided that the CCP meets high-level requirements to be defined in European legislation while taking into account standards agreed at international level, with due regard for the potential costs for the
Amendment 249 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 33 33. Call for different capital treatment for an OTC transaction and a transaction through a central counterparty (CCP), provided that the CCP meets high-level requirements to be defined in European legislation while taking into account standards agreed at international level, with due regard for the potential costs for the corporate sector of using derivatives to hedge its commercial activities and calls for incentivising improved standards of counterparty credit risk management for non-centrally cleared exposures (bilateral clearing); where the highest standards of bilateral clearing apply;
Amendment 25 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F b (new) Fb. whereas, the present framework of rules contributed to falling asset prices due to their procyclical nature,
Amendment 250 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 33 33. Calls for different capital treatment for an OTC transaction and a transaction through a central counterparty (CCP), provided that the CCP meets high-level requirements to be defined in European legislation while taking into account standards agreed at international level, with due regard for the potential costs for the corporate sector of using derivatives to hedge its commercial activities, and calls for rigorous quantitative impact studies before amending the current quantitative requirements for counterparty credit risks;
Amendment 251 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 33 33. Call for different capital treatment for an OTC transaction and a transaction through a central counterparty (CCP), provided that the CCP meets high-level requirements to be defined in European legislation while taking into account standards agreed at international level, with due regard for the potential costs for the corporate sector of using derivatives to hedge its commercial activities and smaller financial institutions on a proportionate basis;
Amendment 252 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 33 a (new) 33a. Is of the view that financial institutions should be allowed use their internal risk measures and allow aggregation of the embedded credit valuation adjustment risk (CVA risk) with similar market risks in the financial institutions and hereby giving incentives to manage the risk;
Amendment 253 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 33 a (new) 33a. Calls for capital treatment of non- centrally cleared transactions to be risk sensitive and reflect reductions in counterparty risk achieved where high standards of bilateral clearing;
Amendment 254 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 34 34. Underlines that the crisis has shown that interconnectedness between financial institutions is greater than
Amendment 255 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 34 34. Underlines that the crisis has shown that interconnectedness between financial institutions is greater than interconnectedness between financial institutions and corporates, and takes the view that capital requirements for CCR should reflect that fact; but we also suggest recalibrating the asset value correlations of the other exposure classes consistently by means of general backtesting as there are indications that conventional lending contributes far less to systemic risk than previously assumed;
Amendment 256 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 34 a (new) 34a. Calls for the Commission to issue capital and liquidity standards, counter- cyclicality provisions and systemic risk penalties for the shadow banking system and other non bank channels for credit provision; considers that these regulations have to be, to the extent possible, equivalent to bank regulations;
Amendment 257 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 35 a (new) 35a. Welcomes in principle the effort to achieve maximum harmonisation in relation to real estate lending; is of the view, however, that flexibility with respect to the treatment of mortgage lending in the EU shall be maintained, given that these markets always developed differently in the past as they did during the financial crisis. The Commission should therefore refrain from tightening the requirements for the preferential treatment of mortgage exposures in stable mortgage markets;
Amendment 258 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 35 b (new) 35b. Underlines that no demand can be seen to review the use of going concern Tier-1 capital for large exposures purpose and therefore according to the current law both going concern and gone concern capital should be the kept as basis of identification of large exposures and the large exposure limits;
Amendment 26 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F a (new) Fa. whereas it should be taken into account that some government bonds are more risky than others, and that some mortgage bonds and covered bonds are more stable than certain government bonds,
Amendment 27 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F a (new) Amendment 28 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F b (new) Fb. whereas an assessment of sustainability risks must be integrated in all lending and investment decision making processes in order to strengthen financial stability and the financial system,
Amendment 29 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G a (new) Ga. whereas the current pattern of package-by-package negotiation on reform of essential regulations could reintroduce the risks of a short-term inconsistent approach, with financial market players deciding which reforms they will accept while arguing that there is a danger of jeopardising recovery; whereas such an approach will not result in the best possible overall structure for addressing the challenges we face,
Amendment 3 #
Motion for a resolution Citation 9 a (new) – having regard to the communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the European Central Bank on Bank Resolution Funds (COM(2010)254),
Amendment 30 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H H. whereas co
Amendment 31 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H a (new) Ha. whereas the strict obedience of the ‘substance-over-form’ principle shall be taken into account by all relevant authorities to prevent non-appropriate results,
Amendment 32 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I Amendment 33 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas convergence between reporting for accounting purposes
Amendment 34 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas convergence between reporting for accounting purposes and reporting for regulatory purposes is essential in order to ensure that supervisors and investors are provided with the same transparent and clear information
Amendment 35 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas convergence between reporting for accounting purposes and reporting for regulatory purposes is essential in order to ensure that supervisors and investors are provided with
Amendment 36 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas convergence between reporting for accounting purposes and reporting for regulatory purposes is essential in order to ensure that supervisors and investors are provided with
Amendment 37 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J J. whereas banks should focus more on the core business of banking
Amendment 38 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J J. whereas banks should focus more on the core business of banking, namely lending to the real economy; whereas the Basel Committee and the Commission have to find ways to promote this core business while not losing sight of the need to extend regulatory reform to currently non-regulated entities in order to avoid regulatory arbitrage,
Amendment 39 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J J. whereas banks should focus more on
Amendment 4 #
Motion for a resolution Recital -A (new) -A. whereas, well-functioning and dynamic European financial markets are a precondition for an innovative and competitive European economy,
Amendment 40 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J J. whereas banks should focus more on the core businesses of banking,
Amendment 41 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas reforms of the Basel II revision must go "hand in hand" with structural reforms of bank supervision,
Amendment 42 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J b (new) Jb. whereas existing metrics must be refined and eventually new metrics be developed to measure systemic risks, whereas such metrics shall be used for identifying system-relevant institutions to strengthen their capital or liquidity base,
Amendment 43 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas cooperative and savings banks have come through the crisis largely unscathed and have not therefore created any financial burden on the public purse,
Amendment 44 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas there are considerable differences in the structure and stability of real estate lending within the EU, and that the separation between mortgage lending and other banking facilities in different institutions has proven a successful model, securing stable and liquid markets for covered bonds based on real-estate,
Amendment 45 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J b (new) Jb. whereas it, in order to maintain affordable access to housing, is important that mortgage credit models that proved financially stable during the crisis are not adversely affected by new regulation,
Amendment 46 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas excessive maturity mismatches and an increasing overdependence on short term borrowing in the past decade was a significant contributor to the morphing of the crisis from a US subprime crisis into a global banking crisis; notwithstanding this, there has not been any relevant regulation to curb this excessive maturity mismatch in a meaningful way thus far,
Amendment 47 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J b (new) Jb. whereas the excessive leverage and maturity mismatches were driven primarily by compensation maximising behaviour by bankers without any regard to the negative consequences on the real economy and tax payers; whereas there is a need for proposals that seriously curb risky practices including through imposing strict caps on bonuses at an absolute level and relative to base salary,
Amendment 48 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J c (new) Jc. whereas the fact that the Basel II accord favours large banks over small, international banks over domestic ones and universal banks over simpler rivals is now well recognized and needs to be urgently addressed so as to stimulate more competition in the financial sector and penalize the systemic risk posed by large institutions,
Amendment 49 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J d (new) Jd. whereas the indiscriminate application of Basel II and excessive uniformity of standards has led to a reduction in the natural diversity of the banking system and needs to be corrected,
Amendment 5 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A A. whereas strong, stable and efficient financial markets and institutions are crucial to meeting the financing needs of the EU’s various economic actors and to boosting growth and employment; whereas the ultimate purpose of the financial system is to provide appropriate instruments for saving and for putting savings to use in the form of investment to promote economic efficiency and the optimisation of long-term financing conditions for investment, pensions and job creation; whereas this function is especially important in a situation where new means of growth are needed, entailing substantial investment in clean technologies; whereas financial development must also be put to use in the cause of fairness by extending access to credit, subject to adequate safeguards, to sections of the population currently cut off from it and thereby handicapped in terms of economic integration; whereas regulatory reform in the financial sector must not be carried out for the sole purpose of ensuring financial stability but must also reflect the aims of sustainable growth and fairness,
Amendment 50 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 a (new) 1a. Welcomes the efforts made by the Basel Committee and the Commission; stresses however that new capital requirement rules should be drafted and implemented with care and their impacts should also be analysed in the wider regulatory overhaul framework;
Amendment 51 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Has concerns about structural deficits and imbalances in the current proposal, as well as the risk of harming economic recovery and economic growth; takes the view that, considering the current economic situation, it will be necessary to monitor that banks are not passing on the cost of the forthcoming proposal to end users of financial services;
Amendment 52 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2.
Amendment 53 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Stresses the need to reinforce the interaction between the supervisory review process (Pillar 2) and disclosure (Pillar 3) by making the results of stress tests and capital add-ons available to the public;
Amendment 54 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Recalls the important specificities of the European banking sector, such as the
Amendment 55 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Recalls the important specificities of the European banking sector, such as the variety of business models operating under different legal forms and the fact that the corporate sector is predominantly financed through bank lending; stresses the importance of public and cooperative banks for small and medium-sized undertakings and for local authority investments;
Amendment 56 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Recalls the important specificities of the European banking sector, such as the
Amendment 57 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Recalls the important specificities of the European banking sector, such as the variety of business models operating under different legal forms and the fact that the corporate sector is predominantly financed through bank lending and the need not to impair mortgage models that has proven resilient during the financial crisis;
Amendment 58 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 4. Urges the Basel Committee as well as the Commission to take proper account of such specificities
Amendment 59 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 4. Urges the Basel Committee to take proper account of such specificities, as well as differences between investment and traditional retail banking services
Amendment 6 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A a (new) Aa. whereas the increase of capital requirement should hit the speculation activity of the banking sector, the tightening of capital requirement must not lead to higher generic handling fees of loan-provisions and to equivalent rise of other banking fees incurred by SMEs and retailers. The more stringent capital requirement rules should take effect during upward trend of the economic cycle,
Amendment 60 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 4. Urges the Basel Committee to take proper account of such specificities, as well as differences between investment and traditional retail banking services as well as transaction banking services, in the revised Basel II rules;
Amendment 61 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5.
Amendment 62 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5.
Amendment 63 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5. Asks the Commission to play an active part in the process of reforming the Basel II rules, to promote and safeguard European interests, to coordinate the approaches of the Member States in order to achieve the best outcome for the
Amendment 64 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 a (new) 5a. Considers that, once the Union adopts exacting rules for itself, it must insist that such rules are applied even-handedly to all those involved in its own market places and that externally they result in fair exchange; believes that negotiations informed by the concept of reciprocity must take into account relative market circumstances and especially imbalances between producer and consumer markets; considers that international cooperation must take account of the capacity of various systems properly to oversee institutions based on their territory and to lessen any systematic risk;
Amendment 65 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 b (new) 5b. Considers therefore that agreements reached under the auspices of the Basel Committee should come into force in the form of international treaties;
Amendment 66 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Acknowledges on the one hand the particular significance of the European market for the global restructuring of the financial markets and, on the other, the importance of an international
Amendment 67 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Acknowledges the importance of an international level playing field; points out, however, that that aim should not place the European economy a
Amendment 68 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Urges the Committee to organise a second consultative round together with another round of quantitative impact studies once the proposals will have taken more concrete and comprehensive content;
Amendment 69 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Points out that the main objective of the CRD revision process is to ensure the stability of the European financial system and stresses that international coordination on financial regulation should be actively promoted in order to reach this goal;
Amendment 7 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A a (new) Aa. whereas the Basel Committee does not make it possible to take account of all stakeholders or the principle of reciprocity,
Amendment 70 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Underlines that a recovery of the European economy requires dynamic financial markets, able to finance investments and innovations, warns against rules, and requirement that would create a new credit crunch, destabilising the economical development and European labour markets;
Amendment 71 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Stresses that the full commitment of all parties engaged in the Basel process to a clear and coherent implementation calendar is a precondition for successful reform, ensuring an international level playing field and avoiding regulatory arbitrage; recognises that revision of the Basel II rules is of enormous importance to the European economy; observes nevertheless that the economic and financial crisis has revealed the urgent need for lasting and effective financial sector regulation and points out that, where necessary, more rapid and stricter regulatory provisions must be introduced at EU level in order, for example, to prevent isolated and ill-fated national initiatives;
Amendment 72 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Stresses that the full commitment of all parties engaged in the Basel and G20 processes to a clear and coherent implementation calendar is a precondition for successful reform
Amendment 73 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Stresses that the full commitment of all parties engaged in the Basel process to a clear and coherent implementation calendar is a precondition for successful reform, ensuring an international level playing field and avoiding regulatory arbitrage; calls on the Commission to strongly encourage all jurisdictions involved in the Basel process to implement agreed rules in a synchronised way;
Amendment 74 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Underlines that
Amendment 75 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Underlines that the implementation timetable must be long enough to reflect the overall impact of the revised standards on the industry and its capacity for lending to the real economy
Amendment 76 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Underlines that the implementation timetable must take account of the recovery process in Europe and reflect the overall impact of the revised standards on the industry and
Amendment 77 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 Amendment 78 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Recalls its concern about the limitations of assumptions concerning correlations made by banks that underlie aspects of the methodology for calculating regulatory capital; stresses the danger of letting banks to police themselves given that internal risks models do not take properly account of tail and systemic risks, regrets that the Commission continues to rely on banks' internal risk models; therefore calls the Commission, National and forthcoming European Banking Authority to strengthen external assessments of banks' risk models and limit the possibility of having recourse to these models in order to define capital requirements;
Amendment 79 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Recalls its concern about the limitations of assumptions concerning correlations made by banks that underlie aspects of the methodology for calculating regulatory capital; notes that care must be taken not to introduce perverse incentives such as reclassification of assets or excessive concentration;
Amendment 8 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A b (new) Ab. whereas the development of systems for the internalisation of banking risks in the spirit of the Basel II agreements has hampered a global approach to these problems, and very inadequate stress tests have exacerbated matters,
Amendment 80 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Calls on the Council and Commission to continue to further integrate EU supervision of the banking sector; urges the Council and the Commission to show in the coming weeks that they have started to learn the lessons from the last two chaotic years and hence to drastically strengthen their position on the supervision package at a level of ambition convergent with the reports adopted in ECON committee; believes that preserving financial stability in the EU requires a three-step approach consisting of: i) a strong prevention framework based on the fight against speculation and the internalization of negative externalities created by financial markets on the basis of the principle 'polluter pays'; ii) early intervention mechanisms through the reinforcement of control and intervention powers of future European Supervisory Authorities including the possibility of temporarily forbidding products and limiting potentially dangerous practices; iii) a single European framework for cross-border crisis resolution based on a fair burden sharing treating subsidiaries on a equal basis and requiring that stockholders and creditors contribute to resolution before taxpayers;
Amendment 81 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Calls on the Commission to continue to further integrate EU supervision of the banking sector; calls on the Commission to examine objectively the various possibilities of separating commercial and investment banks, so as to facilitate effective supervision of the banking sector, which can only be achieved by reducing the complexity thereof; accordingly advocates the tabling of a proposal for a directive along these lines;
Amendment 82 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Calls on the Commission to continue to further integrate EU supervision of the banking sector and to bring forward proposals to ensure a level-playing field in the Single Market by removing and harmonising the national exemptions in the CRD;
Amendment 83 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Calls on the Commission to continue to further i
Amendment 84 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Calls on the Commission to continue to further integrate EU supervision of the banking sector and to introduce a European Systemic Risk Board;
Amendment 85 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 a (new) 11a. Considers that European Commission should take into account future developments of financial innovation by introducing a regular review clause in the CRD IV directive proposal;
Amendment 86 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 12. Calls for a proper assessment to be made of the impact on the real economy, with a special focus on SME financing; calls on the Basel Committee, in establishing risk assessment criteria under the CRD to be guided also by the social, ethical and ecological sustainability of funded projects and take favourable account of these factors for risk assessment purposes;
Amendment 87 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 12. Calls for a proper assessment to be made of the impact on the real economy, with a special focus on SME financing, and, urges the Commission and the forthcoming European Supervisory Authorities to assess properly whether the proposed new standards would increase resilience in case of systemic crisis through stress tests;
Amendment 88 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 12. Calls on the Commission for a proper assessment to be made of the impact on the real economy, with a special focus on SME financing before implementing new rules;
Amendment 89 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 12. Calls for a proper assessment to be made of the impact on the real economy, with a special focus on SME and mortgage financing;
Amendment 9 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A a (new) Aa. whereas all financial markets, actors and instruments must be supervised and regulated as well as all systemically important financial infrastructures such as payment, clearing and settlement systems, mechanisms and platforms, and the associated provision of custodial services in order to preserve financial stability which is a crucial public good; whereas the crisis has put in evidence that bank capital has been clearly insufficient regarding solvability and solvency,
Amendment 90 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 a (new) 12a. Proposes that, following the entry into form of the Lisbon Treaty, all new European legislation on rules for financial sector players and markets should spell out the obligation to respect the letter and spirit of Article 9 of the Treaty, a step that should specifically require banks to consider loan applications in the light of their impact on employment in the EU;
Amendment 91 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 a (new) 12a. Deems that it is necessary to expand the crisis management minimum intervention toolbox available to supervisors, beyond the Article 136 of Directive 2006/48/EC, to include at least the power to: require adjustments of capital, liquidity, business mix and internal process; recommend or impose changes of management; limit the terms of banking licenses; impose living wills; impose a total or partial sale; create a Bridge Bank or Good Bank/Bad Bank; require swaps of debt into equity with appropriate haircuts; impose profits and dividend retention and restrictions in order to consolidate capital requirements and to insure that shareholders pay before taxpayers; restructure and transfer assets and liabilities to other institutions with the objective to ensure continuity of systemically important operations; define criteria in order to value impaired assets; take temporary public control; winding- up;
Amendment 92 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Calls on the Commission to
Amendment 93 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Calls on the Commission to create incentives for the banking sector to manage risk and profit with a view to long-term outcomes and to encourage banks to keep
Amendment 94 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Calls on the Commission to create stringent rules and incentives for the banking sector to manage risk and profit with a view to long-term outcomes and to
Amendment 95 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Calls on the Commission to create incentives for the banking sector to manage risk and profit with a view to long-term outcomes
Amendment 96 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Calls on the Commission to create incentives for the banking sector to manage risk and profit with a view to long-term outcomes and to encourage banks to keep loans on their own books without excessive
Amendment 97 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Calls on the Commission to create incentives for the banking sector to manage risk and profit with a view to long-term outcomes and to encourage banks to keep loans on their own books without excessive securitisation and to fully consolidate
Amendment 98 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 a (new) 13a. Notes that long term investments, such as energy distribution infrastructure, rely on securitisation;
Amendment 99 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 a (new) 13a. Calls on the Basel Committee and the Commission to adopt capital requirements trimming both balance- sheet assets and the number of SPVs to such an extent as to make it henceforth impossible for a financial institution to become to be ‘too big to fail’; advocates therefore the adoption, as a matter of principle, of progressively more stringent prudential standards in proportion to the size of a bank, thereby making it unprofitable to operate a financial institution above a certain size or an excessive number of SPVs;
source: PE-442.841
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