Progress: Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | ECON | MCCARTHY Arlene ( S&D) | WORTMANN-KOOL Corien ( PPE), KLINZ Wolf ( ALDE), LAMBERTS Philippe ( Verts/ALE), KAMALL Syed ( ECR) |
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 54
Legal Basis:
RoP 54Subjects
Events
The European Parliament adopted by 528 votes to 87 with 73 abstentions a resolution on reforming the structure of the EU banking sector.
It begins by noting that state aid of more than EUR 1.6 trillion (12.8 % of EU GDP) was granted to the financial sector between 2008 and the end of 2011, some EUR 1 080 billion of which went on guarantees, EUR 320 billion on recapitalisation measures, EUR 120 billion on impaired assets and EUR 90 billion on liquidity measures . These state financed bailouts have led to a massive increase of public indebtedness , and the OECD has estimated that the value of implicit state guarantees in 2012, in terms of cost savings to EU banks, at around USD 100 billion. Members further note that profits in the financial sector were often privatised while risks and losses were nationalised. However, in a social market economy, risk and liability must go hand in hand. It is only appropriate for the state to guarantee essential services that ensure the smooth running of the real economy, such as payment systems and overdraft facilities. Non-essential services must be priced by the market .
In this context, Parliament welcomes the report of 2 October 2012 of the High-level Expert Group on Reforming the Structure of the EU Banking Sector (HLEG), and also welcomes the Commission‘s intention to bring forward a directive for structural reform of the EU banking sector in order to tackle problems arising from banks being “too big to fail”. It underlines that the directive must be complementary to the existing reforms, which include the Capital Requirements Directives and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive , the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes, and the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive and Regulation. Members also want the Commission to bring forward a legislative proposal on the regulation of the shadow-banking sector that takes into account the principles of the ongoing banking structure reform.
They consider that the objective of all banking structure reform must be to deliver a stable banking system that serves the needs of the real economy, and stimulates economic growth by supporting the provision of credit to the economy, and removes risks to public finances. With this in mind, Members set forward certain principles for reform.
Principles for structural reform :
· excessive risks must be reduced, competition ensured, complexity reduced and interconnectedness limited by providing for the separate operation of essential activities, including credit, payment, deposit and non-essential risky activities;
· corporate governance must be improved and incentives created for banks to increase accountability and reinforce a responsible remuneration system;
· effective bank resolution and recovery must be enabled by ensuring that when banks become untenable they can be allowed to fail and/or resolved in an orderly manner without the need for taxpayer bailouts;
· delivery of essential credit, deposit and payment services must be ensured in a manner unaffected by operational problems , financial losses, funding shortages or reputational damage resulting from the resolution or insolvency;
· risky trading and investment activities must not benefit from implicit guarantees or subsidies, or the use of insured deposits or tax payer bailouts, and the trading and investment activities (not the credit and deposit activities) must bear the risks and costs associated with those activities;
· adequate capital, leverage and liquidity must be available for all banking activities;
· the separated entities must have different sources of funding , with no undue or unnecessary shifting of capital and liquidity between these activities.
Members stress that banks must have in place credible crisis management frameworks that include sufficient capital for credit, payment and deposit activities, bail-in-able liabilities and liquid assets to enable them, in the event of failure, to maintain depositors’ access to funds, protect essential services from the risk of disorderly failure, pay out depositors in a timely fashion and avoid adverse effects on financial stability.
Corporate governance : Parliament calls on the Commission to:
· consider the proposals set out in the HLEG’s report in the area of corporate governance;
· implement the proposals set out in Parliament’s resolution of 11 May 2011 on corporate governance in financial institutions ;
· include provisions establishing an obligation for all executive board members in an entity of a bank to have responsibility as executive board members only for this entity of the bank;
· include provisions to strengthen personal accountability and liability for board members;
· ensure full implementation of the Capital Requirements legislative framework, with particular regard to the provisions on compensation and remuneration, and present an annual report to Parliament and the Council on the implementation and enforcement of the relevant provisions by Member States;
· make provision for effective, dissuasive and proportionate sanctioning regimes for legal and natural persons, and for the publication of sanction levels and of information on those in breach of the rules;
· conduct a study to ensure that accounting standards used by financial institutions give a genuinely true and fair view of banks’ financial health, recalling that the loss of prudence in accounting standards as a consequence of the adoption of international financial reporting standards played, and continues to play, a central role in allowing banks to give a view of their accounts that was not, and is not, always true and fair, with particular reference to IAS 39 on loan loss provisioning.
Enhancing fair and sustainable competition : Members urge the Commission and Member States to work together to promote greater diversification of the EU’s banking sector by encouraging more consumer-oriented banking , for example through cooperatives and building societies. They underline the need to effectively address the issue of SIFIs (‘systemically important financial institution’), which are deemed too big to fail, by rationalising the scale of the activities of banking groups and by reducing interdependencies within groups.
Lastly, Parliament stresses the importance of promoting ‘relationship lending’ or ‘knowledge-based lending’ in legislative initiatives, which should aim to avoid a ‘tick box’ approach and focus instead on promoting vocational and ethical training for those who mediate and lend capital to businesses.
The Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs adopted the own-initiative report by Arlene McCarthy (S&D, UK) on reforming the structure of the EU banking sector.
The report begins by noting that state aid of more than EUR 1.6 trillion (12.8 % of EU GDP) was granted to the financial sector between 2008 and the end of 2011, some EUR 1 080 billion of which went on guarantees, EUR 320 billion on recapitalisation measures, EUR 120 billion on impaired assets and EUR 90 billion on liquidity measures . These state financed bailouts have led to a massive increase of public indebtedness , and the OECD has estimated that the value of implicit state guarantees in 2012, in terms of cost savings to EU banks, at around USD 100 billion. Members further note that profits in the financial sector were often privatised while risks and losses were nationalised. However, in a social market economy, risk and liability must go hand in hand. It is only appropriate for the state to guarantee essential services that ensure the smooth running of the real economy, such as payment systems and overdraft facilities. Non-essential services must be priced by the market .
In this context, the committee welcomes the report of 2 October 2012 of the High-level Expert Group on Reforming the Structure of the EU Banking Sector (HLEG), and also welcomes the Commission‘s intention to bring forward a directive for structural reform of the EU banking sector in order to tackle problems arising from banks being “too big to fail”. It underlines that the directive must be complementary to the existing reforms, which include the Capital Requirements Directives and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive , the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes, and the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive and Regulation. Members also want the Commission to bring forward a legislative proposal on the regulation of the shadow-banking sector that takes into account the principles of the ongoing banking structure reform.
They consider that the objective of all banking structure reform must be to deliver a stable banking system that serves the needs of the real economy, and stimulates economic growth by supporting the provision of credit to the economy, removes risks to public finances and delivers a change in banking culture. With this in mind, Members set forward certain principles for reform.
Principles for structural reform : the committee states that structural reform must be based on the principles set out in the report, particularly that:
· excessive risks must be reduced by providing for the separate operation of essential activities, including credit, payment, deposit and non-essential risky activities;
· corporate governance must be improved and incentives created for banks to increase accountability and reinforce a responsible remuneration system;
· effective bank resolution and recovery must be enabled by ensuring that when banks become untenable they can be allowed to fail and/or resolved in an orderly manner without the need for taxpayer bailouts;
· delivery of essential credit, deposit and payment services must be ensured in a manner unaffected by operational problems , financial losses, funding shortages or reputational damage resulting from the resolution or insolvency;
· risky trading and investment activities must not benefit from implicit guarantees or subsidies, or the use of insured deposits or tax payer bailouts, and the trading and investment activities (not the credit and deposit activities) must bear the risks and costs associated with those activities;
· adequate capital, leverage and liquidity must be available for all banking activities;
· the separated entities must have different sources of funding, with no undue or unnecessary shifting of capital and liquidity between these activities.
Members stress that banks must have in place credible crisis management frameworks that include sufficient capital for credit, payment and deposit activities, bail-in-able liabilities and liquid assets to enable them, in the event of failure, to maintain depositors’ access to funds, protect essential services from the risk of disorderly failure, pay out depositors in a timely fashion and avoid adverse effects on financial stability.
Corporate governance : the report calls on the Commission to:
· consider the proposals set out in the HLEG’s report in the area of corporate governance;
· implement the proposals set out in Parliament’s resolution of 11 May 2011 on corporate governance in financial institutions ;
· include provisions establishing an obligation for all executive board members in an entity of a bank to have responsibility as executive board members only for this entity of the bank;
· include provisions to strengthen personal accountability and liability for board members;
· ensure full implementation of the Capital Requirements legislative framework, with particular regard to the provisions on compensation and remuneration, and present an annual report to Parliament and the Council on the implementation and enforcement of the relevant provisions by the Member States;
· make provision for effective, dissuasive and proportionate sanctioning regimes for legal and natural persons, and for the publication of sanction levels and of information on those in breach of the rules;
· conduct a study to ensure that accounting standards used by financial institutions give a genuinely true and fair view of banks’ financial health, recalling that the loss of prudence in accounting standards as a consequence of the adoption of international financial reporting standards played, and continues to play, a central role in allowing banks to give a view of their accounts that was not, and is not, always true and fair, with particular reference to IAS 39 on loan loss provisioning.
Enhancing fair and sustainable competition : Members stress the importance of effective, fair and sustainable competition to the EU’s economy and urge the Commission and Member States to work together to promote greater diversification of the EU’s banking sector by encouraging more consumer-oriented banking , for example through cooperatives and building societies. They underline the need to effectively address the issue of SIFIs (‘systemically important financial institution’), which are deemed too big to fail, by rationalising the scale of the activities of banking groups and by reducing interdependencies within groups.
Lastly, the report asks the Commission to bring forward measures to promote accessible websites that allow consumers to compare the financial strengths of banks, and to assist in improving consumer choice in the banking sector.
Documents
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2013)627
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament: T7-0317/2013
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Committee report tabled for plenary: A7-0231/2013
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE508.304
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE510.491
- Committee draft report: PE506.244
- Committee draft report: PE506.244
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE508.304
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE510.491
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2013)627
Activities
- Miguel Angel MARTÍNEZ MARTÍNEZ
Plenary Speeches (3)
- 2016/11/22 Laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities (debate)
- 2016/11/22 Laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities (debate)
- 2016/11/22 Laws, regulations and administrative provisions relating to undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities (debate)
- Andrew Henry William BRONS
- Sergio Gaetano COFFERATI
- Jean-Paul GAUZÈS
- Anne E. JENSEN
- Syed KAMALL
- Arlene McCARTHY
- Thomas MANN
- Olle SCHMIDT
- Theodor Dumitru STOLOJAN
Votes
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - § 4 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - § 9, tiret 1/1 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - § 9, tiret 1/2 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - § 9, tirets 2-6 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - § 9, tiret 7 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - § 13/1 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - § 13/2 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - § 14/2 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - Am 1 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - Am 2 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - Considérant E/1 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - Considérant E/2 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - Considérant J/2 #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - Considérant L #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - Considérant AF #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - Considérant AK #
A7-0231/2013 - Arlene McCarthy - Résolution #
Amendments | Dossier |
486 |
2013/2021(INI)
2013/04/18
ECON
486 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Motion for a resolution Citation 1 a (new) - having regard to the Directive 2010/76/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council amending Directives 2006/48/EC and 2006/49/EC as regards capital requirements for the trading book and for re-securitisations, and the supervisory review of remuneration policies.
Amendment 10 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A a (new) Aa. whereas these state financed bailouts lead to a massive increase of public indebtedness in the EU member states;
Amendment 100 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas capital markets need to be able to meet European financial needs at a time of very constrained bank lending. There is a need in Europe to increase the availability of alternative financing sources, in particular through the development of capital market alternatives, to decrease the dependency on bank funding, as identified in the Commission's green paper on Long-Term Financing of the European Economy;
Amendment 101 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas enhanced competition in the European banking industry is highly desirable; whereas the aggregated amount of legislative and regulatory requirements on banks, although indeed warranted for many reasons, risk to create barriers to entry and, therefore, facilitate the cementation of the current banking groups' dominant positions;
Amendment 102 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas the EU banking sector faces far-reaching structural changes resulting from changes in the market situation and comprehensive regulatory reforms such as implementation of the Basel III rules;
Amendment 103 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas the EU needs growth and jobs as businesses need capital and credit; EU banking sector plays an important role to initiate growth, therefore any reforms for the EU banking sector that would impede growth should be avoided;
Amendment 104 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. Whereas there is no evidence from the past that a separation model could positively contribute to avoid a future financial crisis or to diminish the risk of it;
Amendment 105 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas the funding of the real economy by banks is significantly higher in most of the Member States than it is in the UK or the US;
Amendment 106 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J b (new) Jb. whereas the report of the Independent Commission on Banking and the Vickers reforms in the UK state several times that its recommendations are a policy approach for UK banks;
Amendment 107 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 1. Welcomes the HLEG's analysis and recommendations on banking reform
Amendment 108 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 1. Welcomes the HLEG's analysis and recommendations on banking reform and considers them a sound
Amendment 109 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 1. Welcomes the HLEG's analysis and recommendations on banking reform and considers them a sound basis for initiating reforms, subject to a comprehensive impact assessment proving that such reforms are necessary taking into account the impact of the full implementation of the existing package of reforms to capital, liquidity, resolution and capital markets;
Amendment 11 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B B. whereas in the five years since the 2008 global economic and financial crisis, the EU economy has remained in a state of recession, with Member States providing subsidies and implicit guarantees to banks through such schemes as the deposit guarantee scheme as well as liquidity provision from central banks and outright nationalisation of banks which are at risk of insolvency;
Amendment 110 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 1. Welcomes the HLEG's analysis and recommendations on banking reform and considers them a
Amendment 111 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 1. Welcomes the HLEG's analysis and recommendations on banking reform and considers them a sound basis for
Amendment 112 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 1. Welcomes the
Amendment 113 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 1. Welcomes the HLEG's analysis and recommendations on banking reform and considers them a sound basis for the first steps initiating reforms;
Amendment 114 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 a (new) 1a. Takes the view that mandatory separation could damage the market making function in fixed-income markets. This would have adverse effects on the real economy. In particular, it would increase the costs and risks borne by both sovereign borrowers, corporates and the functioning of the financial sector as a whole.
Amendment 115 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 a (new) 1a. Stresses that many of the issues identified in the HLEG's report are addressed by currently processed and already adopted legislative initiatives, most importantly by the proposal for a Directive on bank recovery and resolution;
Amendment 116 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 b (new) 1b. Believes that higher capital and liquidity buffers in combination with robust recovery and resolution regimes and reduced interconnectivity are essential in order to create financial stability. The proposal from the HLEG in relation to mandatory separation of banking activities has to be carefully assessed and be regarded as a possible complement to enhanced capital and liquidity requirements and other reforms already agreed upon. The impact assessment has to assess whether structural reform is needed. A proposal from the Commission to require separation along the lines proposed by the HLEG should not be taken until other legislative reforms have taken full effect.
Amendment 117 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 b (new) 1b. Highlights that HLEG's analysis shows that no particular business model did better than others during the financial crisis of 2008-09; underlines that this insight must be a point of departure of the analysis for further initiatives;
Amendment 118 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current proposals for reforms of EU banking sector rules (including the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive and shadow banking initiatives) are vital,
Amendment 119 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current proposals for reforms of EU banking sector rules (including the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive and shadow banking initiatives) are
Amendment 12 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B B. whereas in the five years since the 2008 global economic and financial crisis, the EU economy has remained in a state of recession, with Member States providing subsidies and implicit guarantees to banks; whereas the vicious circle involving the solvency of states and banks must be broken once and for all;
Amendment 120 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that
Amendment 121 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current proposals for reforms of EU banking sector rules (including the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive and shadow banking initiatives) are vital, a more fundamental reform of the banking structure is essential, and complementary to the other proposals; notes that the above initiatives do not tackle the issue of 'too big to fail' but are primarily about strengthening existing structures; suggests that further reform is required in order to allow markets to function, which would in turn allow banks to be resolved without state intervention.
Amendment 122 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current
Amendment 123 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current proposals for reforms of EU banking sector rules (including the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive
Amendment 124 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current proposals for reforms of EU banking sector rules (including the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive and shadow banking initiatives)
Amendment 125 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that
Amendment 126 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that
Amendment 127 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current proposals for reforms of EU banking sector rules (including the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive and shadow banking initiatives)
Amendment 128 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that
Amendment 129 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current proposals for reforms of EU banking sector rules (including the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive and shadow banking initiatives) are vital, a more
Amendment 13 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B B. whereas in the five years since the 2008 global economic and financial crisis, the EU economy
Amendment 130 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current proposals for reforms of EU banking sector rules (including the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive and shadow banking initiatives) are vital and their structural impacts have to take effect, a more fundamental reform of the banking structure is essential, and complementary to the other proposals;
Amendment 131 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that
Amendment 132 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2. Takes the view that while current proposals for reforms of EU banking sector rules (including the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation, the Recovery and Resolution Directive, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive and shadow banking initiatives) are vital, a more fundamental reform of the banking structure is
Amendment 133 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. notes that consumer confidence in the financial services sector can only be restored if banks act in the interests of their customers, and not solely in the interests of their shareholders and employees; emphasises the need for customers to be alerted to the fact that their money is not kept in the bank itself but lent out to other enterprises, companies and governments; notes that on this basis, deposits are in fact investments in the bank and that retail investors must have this made clear to them when opening deposit accounts;
Amendment 134 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for a principles based approach to structural reforms of the European banking sector that is consistent with, and complementary to, already existing and forthcoming Union legislation for financial services; takes the view that EBA should play a key role by developing relevant technical standards to ensure consistent application and enforcement by the competent authorities, including the ECB, across the Union;
Amendment 135 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Maintains that structural reform, particularly if it results in a simpler and more modular banking system, is a more effective approach to achieving financial stability, competitivity and market discipline than a regulatory arms race in which ever more complex banking products, activities and structures are countered ex-post with increasingly unwieldy and equally complex sectoral legislation;
Amendment 136 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Stresses that particularly the higher capital requirements and clearing obligations for OTC-traded derivatives will make a significant contribution to reducing risk in the financial sector;
Amendment 137 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. It is noted that capital rules are overly complex and that structural reforms should not add to complexity and should be aimed at paving the way for simplification and thereby greater transparency. Simplicity should also be emphasised in the approval of recovery and resolution plans;
Amendment 138 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Considers that financial stability at the national level should not come at the expense of the free movement of capital and single market integration.
Amendment 139 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Underlines the importance the funds for DGS and RRD measures stipulated in the Recovery and Resolution Directive and the Deposit Guarantee Schemes Directive will have for the financial stability;
Amendment 14 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B B. whereas in the five years since the 2008 global economic and financial crisis, the EU economy has remained in a state of recession, with Member States providing s
Amendment 140 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Deplores the national initiatives in France, Germany and UK that, although well intended, risk to undermine the Single Market and distort competition in the EU banking sector;
Amendment 141 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 b (new) 2b. Underscores that while, for a bank with a given business model, prudential requirements aim at reducing the probability of failure and recovery and resolution requirements aim at limiting the cost of such a failure, the most effective way to prevent future systemic instability is to directly address the size, complexity, interconnectedness, degree of maturity mismatch and other factors that lead to market-distorting implicit subsidies for many banks in the first place, and are inherent in their business models;
Amendment 142 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 b (new) 2b. Considers there is a strong need in Europe for harmonization and common rules. The creation of the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM), a Single Rulebook and a Single Resolution Mechanism reinforces the need for a European approach towards reform of bank structures, avoiding a patchwork of national initiatives.
Amendment 143 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 b (new) 2b. Urges the Commission to conduct, in any further legislative initiatives, a thorough analysis, in advance, of the effects of the laws on regulation in the banking sector which are currently under discussion or have already been adopted and to include the results in an impact study on the legislative proposal;
Amendment 144 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 c (new) 2c. Emphasizes the importance of a well- balanced and diversified funding structure in terms of sources of financing, maturity and other risk exposures, nonetheless cautions that separation of banks will make the different structures less diversified and more expensive.
Amendment 145 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Insists that the Commission's impact assessment include a thorough assessment of the cost to both public finances and financial stability of the failure of an EU- based bank during the current crisis,
Amendment 146 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Insists that the Commission's impact assessment include a thorough assessment of the cost to both public finances and financial stability of the failure of an EU- based bank during the current crisis
Amendment 147 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Insists that the Commission’s impact assessment include a thorough assessment of the cost to both public finances and financial stability of the failure of an EU- based bank during the current crisis,
Amendment 148 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Insists that the Commission's impact assessment include a thorough assessment of the cost to both public finances and financial stability of the failure of an EU- based bank during the current crisis, together with information on the nature of the EU's current universal banking model, including the size and balance sheets of the retail and investment activities of all universal banks operating in the EU, broken down by individual bank and country; the impact assessment should also explore: the present financing needs of the European economy; the effects on the competitive landscape; incremental benefits, considering the regulatory changes already underway (as stressed in the ECB opinion); the impact on diversity of funding sources for the real economy and on European businesses' access to capital markets financing;
Amendment 149 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Insists that the Commission's impact assessment include a thorough assessment of the value of implicit guarantees provided by Member States to banks, including a methodology for regularly monitoring that value at Member State and Union level as an essential prerequisite for being able to assess the effectiveness of legislation at reducing the value of those guarantees, as well as the cost to both public finances and financial stability of the failure of an EU-
Amendment 15 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B B. whereas in the f
Amendment 150 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3.
Amendment 151 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Insists that the Commission's impact assessment includes a
Amendment 152 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Insists that the Commission's impact assessment include a thorough assessment of the cost to both public finances and financial stability of the failure of an EU- based bank during the current crisis,
Amendment 153 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3.
Amendment 154 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 a (new) 3a. Stresses that also an impact assessment of the cost to the EU economy of splitting up certain banks needs to be taken into account when developing possible measures; underlines that such an impact assessment should also provide a clear picture on the desired timing of such possible reforms given the difficult economic situation within the European Union;
Amendment 155 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 a (new) 3a. Requires that the Commission's impact assessment take account of all other regulatory proposals designed to mitigate the costs of future bank failure and promote financial stability, in particular CRD IV and the Recovery and Resolution directive;
Amendment 156 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 a (new) 3a. Considers, moreover, that in view, inter alia, of the current difficult economic situation in the European Union, this impact assessment should also investigate the desirable timetable for such structural reforms;
Amendment 157 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 4. Reminds the Commission of the warning issued by the European Banking Authority and the European Central Bank (ECB) that financial innovation can undermine the objectives of structural reforms, and
Amendment 158 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 4. Reminds the Commission of the warning issued by the European Banking Authority and the European Central Bank (ECB) that financial innovation can undermine the objectives of structural reforms, and
Amendment 159 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 4. Reminds the Commission of the warning issued by the European Banking Authority and the European Central Bank (ECB) that financial innovation can undermine the objectives of structural reforms, and insists that structural reforms be subject to periodic review7 to ensure that financial institutions are not benefiting from regulatory arbitrage;
Amendment 16 #
Motion for a resolution Recital B a (new) Ba. whereas the OECD in its 2012 report estimates the value of implicit state guarantees, in terms of cost savings to EU banks, at around 100 Billion USD for 2012 with wide variations between banks and Member States and the greatest benefit accruing to the banks of greatest size, particularly if they are perceived to be weak, and to banks based in the Member States with the highest sovereign credit rating. Furthermore the report finds that such guarantees extend beyond those banks classified as SIFIs under the FSB's methodology;
Amendment 160 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 4. Reminds the Commission of the warning issued by the European Banking Authority and the European Central Bank (ECB) that financial innovation can undermine the objectives of structural reforms, and insists that structural reforms be subject to
Amendment 161 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 4.
Amendment 162 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 a (new) 4a. Invites the Commission to consider legislation applicable to the whole EU financial sector that explicitly prohibits activities and transactions whose primary purpose is deemed by the relevant authorities to be regulatory arbitrage or any other circumvention of sectoral legislation;
Amendment 163 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5. Urges the Commission to
Amendment 164 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5. Urges the Commission to ensure that the core principles of reform detailed in paragraph 7 also apply to the shadow banking sector and unregulated areas of the financial services sector in a way that is tailored to the specific nature of the services they provide;
Amendment 165 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5. Urges the Commission to ensure that the
Amendment 166 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5. Urges the Commission to ensure that the core principles of reform detailed in paragraph 7 also apply to the shadow banking sector and unregulated areas of the financial services sector if a structural review was to be initiated;
Amendment 167 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 a (new) 5a. Notes that the HLEG did not look at the issue of accounting standards and their role in financial crisis in sufficient depth; notes that European company law requires that accounts must be true and fair in order for directors of a company to discharge their liabilities to creditors and shareholders of companies; suggests that as a consequence of international financial reporting standards being overly complex and being principally about providing information to the share trading part of capital markets, these standards did and do not give a true and fair view of banks' accounts; notes that despite commitments from the IASB to update IAS 39 on loan loss provisioning from an incurred to expected loss model, its adoption has been delayed due to concerns expressed by FASB that the revised IASB model is still not a lifetime expected loss model; notes that although moving to an expected loss model recognises the problems caused by IAS 39 during the crisis, the added complexity may well create problems of their own; argues that, therefore, structural reform must include a thorough assessment of what role accounts should play in driving better governance of banks;
Amendment 168 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 a (new) 5a. recalls that any banking reform would not deliver if the supervision is not undertaken at the relevant level or is not provided with appropriate means; underlines that the transmission of information is key to ensure quality work by supervisors;
Amendment 169 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 a (new) 5a. Invites the EC to transpose the recommendations of the different workstreams of the FSB on shadow banking, in particular the proposals on repo transaction and security lending.
Amendment 17 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate equity capital and liquidity requirements
Amendment 170 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that
Amendment 171 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that the core principle of
Amendment 172 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that the core principle of banking reform must be to deliver a safe, stable, competitive, transparent and efficient banking system, where ultimately no bank benefits from implicit public subsidies and all banks that reach the point of non-viability can be wound up or resolved without the need for extraordinary public support, that serves the needs of the real economy through the economic cycle, customers and consumers; takes the view that structural reform must stimulate economic growth by supporting the provision of credit to the economy, in particular to SMEs and start-ups, provide greater resilience against potential financial crises, restore trust and confidence in banks and remove risks to public finances;
Amendment 173 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that the core principle of banking reform must be to deliver a safe, stable and efficient banking system that serves the needs of the real economy, customers and consumers; takes the view that structural reform must stimulate economic growth by supporting the provision of credit to the economy, in particular to SMEs and start-ups, provide greater resilience against potential financial crises, restore trust and confidence in banks and remove risks to public finances; Recognises also that market making is an essential part of the infrastructure of fixed-income markets in EU-countries and that the importance of market making for fixed-income markets has been recognised by the European Parliament in the current review of MiFID/MiFIR.
Amendment 174 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that the core principle of banking reform must be to deliver a safe, stable and efficient banking system that serves the needs of the real economy, customers and consumers; takes the view that shat any reforms, including structural
Amendment 175 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that the core principle of banking reform must be to deliver a safe, stable and efficient banking system that serves the needs of the real economy, customers and consumers; takes the view that structural reform must stimulate economic growth by supporting the provision of credit to the economy, in particular to SMEs and start-ups, provide greater resilience against potential financial crises
Amendment 176 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that the core principle of potential banking reform must be to deliver a safe, stable and efficient banking system that serves the needs of the real economy, customers and consumers; takes the view that
Amendment 177 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that the core principle of banking reform must be to deliver a safe, stable and efficient banking system that serves the needs of the real economy, customers and consumers; takes the view that structural reform must stimulate economic growth by supporting the provision of credit to the economy, in particular to SMEs and start-ups, provide greater resilience against potential financial crises, restore trust and confidence in banks, harmonise liability and risk and remove risks to public finances;
Amendment 178 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that the core principle of banking reform, if conducted, must be to deliver a safe, stable and efficient banking system that serves the needs of the real economy, customers and consumers; takes the view that structural reform must stimulate economic growth by supporting the provision of credit to the economy, in particular to SMEs and start-ups, provide greater resilience against potential financial crises, restore trust and confidence in banks and remove risks to public finances;
Amendment 179 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Considers that the core principle of banking reform must be to deliver a safe, stable and efficient banking system that serves the needs of the real economy, customers and consumers; takes the view that structural reform must stimulate economic growth by supporting the provision of sustainable credit to the economy, in particular to SMEs and start- ups, provide greater resilience against potential financial crises, restore trust and confidence in banks and remove risks to public finances;
Amendment 18 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate capital and liquidity requirements
Amendment 180 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. notes that existing proposals, although welcome, seek to tackle specific activities, relationships and products that are perceived to be problematic; argues that the ongoing crisis is in part due to the fact that banks and sovereigns are inappropriately connected via implicit and explicit state guarantees as a consequence of certain banks being too big to fail; suggests that further reform is required in order to ensure that banks do not benefit from implicit or explicit state guarantees and they are subject to market forces as other private companies are;
Amendment 181 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Observes that while investment firms are often portrayed as 'casino banks', it should be noted that they do play an important role in our economy by connecting investors, including pension funds to companies. Further, creating and trading financial assets, is important for allocating capital to people, entrepreneurs and businesses that are likely to be profitable and beneficial to society; these activities should not be prejudiced by structural reforms but unnecessary financial churning should be targeted;
Amendment 182 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Remembers that one of the main reasons why the situation in Cyprus has been so difficult to deal with is the fact that the banking system was more or less solely dependent on retail deposits for its funding. Highlights that had there been a larger share of unsecured debt-holders in the funding mix of Cypriot banks, the extraordinarily unfortunate debacle of bailing in insured depositors most probably would not have taken place;
Amendment 183 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Recognises the importance of market making activities to the provision of credit and risk management services to the real economy, the value that universal banks can provide to their customers and the risks associated with structural measures;
Amendment 184 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Calls for more legal certainty and clarity in all ongoing and additional reforms, which have direct impact on funding costs for banks and - in consequence - also effect lending to the real economy;
Amendment 185 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 b (new) 6b. Considers that banking activities that are essential for the functioning of the EU capital markets, such as market making, certain hedging activities, certain types of forex and interest related derivatives transactions, must not be hampered by new reform initiatives, these activities should be analysed and addressed on the basis of their importance for the functioning of the capital markets and creating long term economic growth;
Amendment 186 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 b (new) 6b. Suggests that banking reform must identify which financial systems, services and processes must be protected in the event of a crisis to ensure civil order is maintained; argues that it is only appropriate for the state to guarantee these essential systems, services and processes; points out that non essential services should be priced at the market rate;
Amendment 187 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 b (new) 6b. Acknowledges the potential problems posed by large and overly complex banking groups. Is of the opinion that such concerns are most effectively mitigated through a credible recovery and resolution framework whereby it is ensured shareholders and bank creditors will be the ones to bear the losses from bank failures;
Amendment 188 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 c (new) 6c. Underlines that banks which are solely dependent on deposits and retail activities, thereby reducing the possible scope for bail-in, might pose a risk to public finances, as was clearly seen in Cyprus;
Amendment 189 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between risky and commercial activities, improve corporate governance, create a responsible remuneration system, allow effective bank resolution and recovery, reinforce bank capital and deliver credit to the
Amendment 19 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate capital and liquidity requirements and
Amendment 190 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between risky and commercial activities, improve corporate governance, create a responsible remuneration system, allow effective bank resolution and recovery, reinforce bank capital and deliver credit to the real economy; suggests that this will be achieved by introducing a greater degree of personal liability to ensure the managers of companies take responsibility for the actions and decisions of their employees;
Amendment 191 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture
Amendment 192 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between risky and commercial activities, improve corporate governance, improved accountability for product design and marketing, quality of service to customers and enhance the personal liability for irresponsible risk taking for senior managers, create a responsible remuneration system, allow effective bank resolution and recovery, reinforce bank capital and deliver credit to the real economy;
Amendment 193 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between risky and
Amendment 194 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between risky
Amendment 195 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition,
Amendment 196 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between risky and commercial activities, improve corporate governance, create a responsible remuneration system, allow effective bank resolution and recovery, reinforce bank capital and deliver credit and provide important service functions to the real economy;
Amendment 197 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between risky and commercial activities, improve corporate governance, create a responsible and moderate remuneration system, allow effective bank resolution and recovery, reinforce bank capital and deliver credit to the real economy;
Amendment 198 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between
Amendment 199 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance fair and sustainable competition, limit interconnectedness between
Amendment 2 #
Motion for a resolution Citation 4 a (new) - having regard to the Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council establishing a framework for the recovery and resolution of credit institutions and investment firms and amending Council Directives 77/91/EEC and 82/891/EC, Directives 2001/24/EC, 2002/47/EC, 2004/25/EC, 2005/56/EC, 2007/36/EC and 2011/35/EC and Regulation (EU) No 1093/2010
Amendment 20 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate capital and liquidity requirements
Amendment 200 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture and practice in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between risky market- related activities and commercial activities, improve corporate governance, create a responsible remuneration system, allow effective bank resolution and recovery, reinforce bank capital and deliver credit to the real economy;
Amendment 201 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 7. Considers that an effective banking system must deliver a change in banking culture in order to reduce complexity, enhance competition, limit interconnectedness between risky and commercial activities, improve corporate governance, create a responsible remuneration system, allow effective bank resolution and recovery, reinforce bank capital and deliver sustainable credit to the real economy;
Amendment 202 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 a (new) 7a. Notes that, some risks such as concentration risk, interest rate risk and operational risk are unlikely to be made 'safer' by structural reform and that many banking problems have in fact been concentrated on the retail side or result from sovereign bond capital holdings. In this respect urges the Commission to work closely with the Basel committee and swiftly implement any further recommendations from them in these areas;
Amendment 203 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 a (new) 7a. Considers that structural reform must be complemented by legislation setting out simple, clear and enforceable rules that ensure that activities not permitted for certain banks do not end up being carried out by under regulated shadow banking entities, especially those to which regulated banks are directly or indirectly exposed;
Amendment 204 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 a (new) 7a. Considers that the transmission funds efficiently from savers to investors is a key component of a well functioning economy and necessary for long term economic growth within the EU and that market making activities which service clients and provide liquidity are key contributors to this process.
Amendment 205 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 a (new) 7a. Considers that, as stressed by the ECB, published on January, 24, the diversity of business models in the EU should be preserved; no one-size-fits-all solution should be imposed;
Amendment 206 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 b (new) 7b. Considers that free movement of capital and the great potential of the Single Market should not be compromised for the sake of uncoordinated and disproportionate measures taken with a view to preserving financial stability exclusively at national level. The current practices of 'ring-fencing' assets, which could, in practice, restrict cross-border transfers of banks' capital and potentially constrain the free flow of capital throughout the European Union should be forbidden;
Amendment 207 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 b (new) 7b. Considers that it is essential to establish regulatory regimes for activities, such as securitisation and repo funding, which can provide a benefit to the real economy but entail potentially large systemic risks. Such regimes could consist of specific limited purpose banking licences for such entities and rules governing their permitted activities and related prudential requirements as well as their interactions with other components of the financial system;
Amendment 208 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 b (new) 7b. Urges the Commission to finalise its impact assessment and on the basis of it come forward with an appropriate follow up taking into account the aims, results and effects of the ongoing regulatory reform agenda.
Amendment 209 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 c (new) 7c. Considers there is a strong need in Europe for harmonization and common rules. The creation of the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM), a Single Rubebook and a Single Resolution Authority reinforces the need for a European approach towards reform of bank structures avoiding a patchwork of national initiatives;
Amendment 21 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate capital
Amendment 210 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 c (new) 7c. Urges the Commission to not prejudge the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision's ongoing review of the Trading Book;
Amendment 211 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 d (new) 7d. Considers that the Liikanen report explained that poor funding structures are one of the main sources of the banking crisis. Emphasizes in this respect the importance of a well-balanced and diversified funding structure in terms of sources of financing, maturity and other risk exposures;
Amendment 212 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 e (new) 7e. Considers that with the introduction of the bail-in concept of the RRD, owners and all creditors of banks will be the ones bailing out banks in the next crisis and that the power to separate activities vested in the resolution authority will be an important tool under the Bank Recovery and Resolution directive and it will represent a proportionate, tailored and risk-sensitive approach;
Amendment 213 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 f (new) 7f. Underlines the important role of banks in providing capital market services to governments, companies and investors to issue bonds and securities in the markets and stresses in this respect the vital role of market making;
Amendment 215 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 Amendment 216 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 Amendment 217 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 Amendment 218 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to c
Amendment 219 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8.
Amendment 22 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate capital and liquidity requirements
Amendment 220 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges if the Commission
Amendment 221 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for mandatory separation of banks’
Amendment 222 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for
Amendment 223 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to co
Amendment 224 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for mandatory separation of
Amendment 225 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission
Amendment 226 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8.
Amendment 227 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for mandatory separation of banks’
Amendment 228 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for mandatory separation of banks' retail and investment activities in order to ensure that the state only guarantees essential banking services;
Amendment 229 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for mandatory separation of
Amendment 23 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate capital and liquidity requirements, inadequate governance, risk management and compliance and the excessive complexity of the overall banking system were at the root of the financial crisis;
Amendment 230 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for mandatory separation of banks' retail and
Amendment 231 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for mandatory separation
Amendment 232 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Urges the Commission to analyse the need to come forward with a proposal for mandatory separation of banks' retail and investment activities;
Amendment 233 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 a (new) 8a. Urges the Commission, rather than attempting to exhaustively define what retail banks are not permitted to do, to base the key definition of what should be inside a "ring-fence" on a positive definition of the core financial services provided by banks to the real economy that cannot be allowed to be interrupted, and therefore will continue to receive an implicit government guarantee; Believes that only such an approach can serve as a basis for a clear and enforceable way of preventing disruption to these services by problems other banking activities. Such a definition should take account of which activities constitute services of general economic interest as referred to in Article 14 TFEU;
Amendment 234 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 a (new) 8a. Urges the Commission to carry out a thorough impact analysis of such a legislative proposal including whether the main aim of a banking structural reform, increasing the solvability and the resolvability of European banks, has already been achieved by ongoing European legislation;
Amendment 235 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 a (new) 8a. underlines that keeping both entities in one single bank holding will not entirely eliminate the risk of spillover effects, as in stress situations, reputational risk may spread within the banking group thus reducing the potential benefits of separation.
Amendment 236 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 a (new) 8a. urges the Commission to include into their proposal a cap on bank leverage, a cap on size as well as an implementation of a rigorous bail-in regime that will see all creditors bear the risk of absorbing banks' losses;
Amendment 237 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 a (new) 8a. Underlines that such proposal might hinder the functioning of the whole banking sector of the EU, distort competition and pose far-reaching negative effects on the economic growth;
Amendment 238 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 b (new) 8b. Recommends that any definition of proprietary market risk taking cover at least any activity resulting in a marginal increase in net exposure of the bank to market risk where either a) the activities are not undertaken as a service requested by a client in relation to the prudent management of the client's financial needs in the clients best interest or b) it is possible to transfer the resulting market risk to a legally separate entity, but this is not, in fact, done;
Amendment 239 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 c (new) 8c. Stresses that, where core banking services provided by retail banks to the real economy unavoidably result in proprietary market risk taking, that this risk be required to be fully hedged where possible or subject to strict limits on the level and duration of such exposure for particular activities;
Amendment 24 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas a weak European regulatory framework with excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate capital and liquidity requirements and the excessive complexity of the overall banking system were at the root of the financial crisis;
Amendment 240 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 Amendment 241 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to co
Amendment 242 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation
Amendment 243 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to
Amendment 244 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible ‘ring fence’
Amendment 245 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to
Amendment 246 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation
Amendment 247 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible ‘ring fence’ around bank activities that are vital for the real economy, such as those relating to credit functions, payment systems and deposits; takes the view that in the event of a bank failure, the ring fence must ensure that the retail entity continues business unaffected by operational problems, financial losses, funding shortages or reputational damage resulting from the resolution or insolvency of the investment entity; considers a holding structure to be one way of ensuring that the requisite ring fence is put in place under one roof; urges the Commission to investigate how the joint and several liability of individual business units can be effectively brought to an end and economies of scope and scale put into practice with a holding structure in place;
Amendment 248 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible ‘ring fence’ around bank activities that are vital for the real economy, such as those relating
Amendment 249 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible ‘ring fence’ around bank activities that are vital for the real economy, such as those relating to credit functions, payment systems and deposits; takes the view that in the event of a bank failure, the ring fence must ensure that the retail entity continues business unaffected by operational problems, financial losses, funding shortages or reputational damage resulting from the resolution or insolvency of the investment entity, the 'ring fence' must be part of a technicality that protects EU tax payers from bailing out both retail and investment entities;
Amendment 25 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate capital and liquidity requirements and
Amendment 250 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to co
Amendment 251 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent, complete and credible
Amendment 252 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to
Amendment 253 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for
Amendment 254 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for
Amendment 255 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible ‘ring fence’ around bank activities that are
Amendment 256 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible
Amendment 257 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible
Amendment 258 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible ‘ring fence’ around bank activities that are vital for the real economy, such as those relating to credit functions, payment systems and deposits; takes the view that in the event of a bank failure, the ring fence must ensure that the retail entity continues business unaffected by operational problems, financial losses, funding shortages or reputational damage resulting from the resolution or insolvency of
Amendment 259 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for
Amendment 26 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C C. whereas excessive risk-taking, excessive leverage, inadequate capital and liquidity
Amendment 260 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible ‘ring fence’ around bank activities that are
Amendment 261 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Urges the Commission to come forward with a proposal for such mandatory separation through the establishment of a thorough, transparent and credible ‘ring fence’ around bank activities that are vital for the real economy, such as those relating to credit functions, payment systems and deposits; takes the view that in the event of a bank failure, the ring fence must ensure that the retail entity continues business
Amendment 262 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 a (new) 9a. Encourages the Commission to explore bank models that increase transparency, improve competition, facilitate supervision and regulatory intervention and reduce contagion risk in case of a crisis.
Amendment 263 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 a (new) 9a. Urges the Commission to include in its thorough impact assessment alternatives to separation including higher risk management standards for trading activities and proprietary trading;
Amendment 264 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the
Amendment 265 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure th
Amendment 266 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that
Amendment 267 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that
Amendment 268 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that proprietary trading activities on own account that are not related to the facilitation of client orders or hedging of risks do not benefit from implicit public guarantees, the use of insured deposits or taxpayer bailouts and that these activities do not pose a risk to the delivery of
Amendment 269 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that trading and investment activities do not benefit from implicit guarantees, the use of insured deposits or taxpayer bailouts and that these activities do not pose a risk to the
Amendment 27 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C a (new) Ca. whereas the loss of prudence in accounting standards as a consequence of the adoption of international financial reporting standards played and continues to play a central role in allowing banks to give a view of their accounts that was and is not always true and fair with particular reference to IAS 39 on loan loss provisioning;
Amendment 270 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that trading activities do not benefit from implicit guarantees, the use of insured deposits or taxpayer bailouts and that these activities
Amendment 271 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that trading activities that are not related to the provision of client-related services do not benefit from implicit guarantees, the use of insured deposits or taxpayer bailouts and that these activities do not pose a risk to the delivery of r
Amendment 272 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that trading activities do not benefit from implicit guarantees, the use of
Amendment 273 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that trading activities do not benefit from implicit guarantees, the use of insured deposits or taxpayer bailouts and that these activities do not pose a risk to the delivery of ring-fenced retail services
Amendment 274 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that
Amendment 275 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that trading activities are priced by the market and do not benefit from implicit guarantees, the use of insured
Amendment 276 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that speculative trading activities do not benefit from implicit guarantees, the use of insured deposits or taxpayer bailouts and that these activities do not pose a risk to the delivery of ring-fenced retail services;
Amendment 277 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 10. Urges the Commission to ensure that trading activities do not benefit from implicit guarantees, the use of insured deposits or taxpayer bailouts and that these activities do not pose a risk to the delivery of ring-fenced
Amendment 278 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 a (new) 10a. In the case where there is no separate investment banking entity, it might be possible for a deposit-taking bank to conduct limited trading activities to the benefit of its non-financial clients proving that: i) These trading activities are limited to simple financial instruments undertaken with / on behalf of non-financial clients, ii) The amount of trading activities within the deposit-taking bank is capped as a % of total balance sheet. The amount of the threshold should be precisely assessed in the impact assessment.
Amendment 279 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 a (new) 10a. Urges the commission to take into account efficiency as well as safety when proposing separation of bank activities given that costs will be passed on to consumers and customers and have an immediate cost to society whereas the effectiveness of structural separation is not proven, not least as failures in the crisis have predominantly been in retail operations, mainly mortgage related, or due to over-expansion in mergers; notes that total guarantees for the retail side of banking may in fact continue to encourage overly risky mortgage lending.
Amendment 28 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C a (new) Ca. whereas taking into account the weak situation of the European economy, the completion and implementation of existing new regulation (CRD IV, Banking Union...) should be prioritised and not disturbed by new reforms with high destabilizing capabilities;
Amendment 280 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 10 a (new) 10a. Urges the Commission to investigate which commercial activities should be permitted for banks, and on what scale, to enable them effectively to support the real economy and to ensure the stability of individual institutions and of the financial sector overall;
Amendment 281 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the Commission to ensure that
Amendment 282 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the
Amendment 283 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the Commission to ensure that where banks undertake trading activities, to be understood as but not limited to market making, underwriting, proprietary trading and credit to leveraged investment funds, the risks and costs associated with those activities are borne by their trading arm and not by
Amendment 284 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the Commission to ensure that where a bank
Amendment 285 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the Commission to ensure that where banks undertake particularly risky investment and trading activities, the risks and costs associated with those activities are borne by their
Amendment 286 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the Commission to ensure that where banks undertake purely financial trading activities in derivatives, the risks and costs associated with those activities
Amendment 287 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the Commission to ensure that where banks undertake
Amendment 288 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the Commission to ensure that where banks undertake
Amendment 289 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the Commission to ensure that where banks undertake speculative trading activities, the risks and costs associated with those activities are borne by their trading arm and not by their ring-fenced retail arm;
Amendment 29 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C a (new) Ca. whereas in Europe, risks were also accumulated by commercial banks, which issued loans in the real estate sector on the basis of short-sighted, defective risk management;
Amendment 290 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 11. Urges the Commission to ensure that where banks undertake trading activities, the risks and costs associated with those activities are borne by their trading arm and not by their ring-fenced
Amendment 291 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 a (new) 11a. Urges the Commission to take account, in its proposal, of the fact that a bank’s retail arm must be allowed to conduct certain investment activities if they form part of its services provided for the real economy or serve to safeguard their own risk positions; urges the Commission to provide for suitable derogations and to stipulate thresholds;
Amendment 292 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 11 a (new) 11a. Urges the Commission to consider the need for retail and commercial banks to maintain certain investment banking activities in order to service the real economy or to mitigate own risk positions and to include in its considerations adequate thresholds or product-related exceptions;
Amendment 293 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 Amendment 294 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 Amendment 295 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – introductory part 12. Urges the Commission to ensure that separation results in: (a) separate legal entities, with separate sources of funding for the bank's retail and investment entities; (b) limits on the extent to which the two entities are reliant on each other for funding and/or resources; in particular, there should be no legal basis for shifting capital and liquidity between from ring- deposit-taking and investment banking entities to other entities in the group. Strict firewalls are required between individual business entities. The group can still take advantage of synergies and scale economies, including a common technology platform, but without unwanted financial contamination of the banking affiliates' balance sheet. (c) the application of adequate, thorough and separate capital, leverage and liquidity rules to each entity, including separate balance sheets; (d) net and gross large exposure limits for intra-group transactions between ring- fenced and non-ring-fenced activities the commercial banking entity and the trading / investment banking entity, which are at least as strict as those for third- party exposure, including strict limits on the exposure of ring-fenced activities to the investment entity's riskier activities
Amendment 296 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – introductory part 12. Urges the Commission to ensure that
Amendment 297 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – introductory part 12. Urges the Commission to ensure
Amendment 298 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – introductory part 12.
Amendment 299 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – introductory part 12. Urges the Commission to ensure that any separation
Amendment 3 #
Motion for a resolution Citation 6 a (new) - having regard to the proposal of 6 June 2012 for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council establishing a framework for the recovery and resolution of credit institutions and investment firms and amending Council Directives 77/91/EEC and 82/891/EC, Directives 2001/24/EC, 2002/47/EC, 2004/25/EC, 2005/56/EC, 2007/36/EC and 2011/35/EC and Regulation (EU) No 1093/2010,
Amendment 30 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C a (new) Ca. whereas profits in the financial sector were often privatised but risks and losses were nationalised; whereas in a social market economy, risk and liability must go hand in hand;
Amendment 300 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – introductory part 12. Urges the Commission to
Amendment 301 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – introductory part 12. Urges the Commission to ensure that
Amendment 302 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – introductory part 12. Urges the Commission to ensure that separation at least results in:
Amendment 304 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a (a) functionally separate
Amendment 305 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a (a) separate legal entities, with separate sources of funding for the bank's retail and investment entities, in order to ensure that the state guarantee and subsidy for the retail arm does not cross subsidise the investment entity;
Amendment 306 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a (a) separate legal entities, with separate sources of funding for the bank’s
Amendment 307 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a (a) separate legal entities, with separate sources of funding for the bank's retail and investment entities, as well as separate management and accounting departments;
Amendment 308 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a (a) separate legal entities, with separate sources of funding for the bank’s
Amendment 309 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a (a) separate legal entities, with separate sources of funding for the bank's retail and
Amendment 31 #
Motion for a resolution Recital C a (new) Ca. whereas, as highlighted in the HLEG's analysis, no particular business model did particularly well or particularly poorly during the financial crisis;
Amendment 310 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a (a) ensure the viability of possible separate legal entities, with separate sources of funding for the bank's retail and
Amendment 311 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a (a) separate legal entities, with separate sources of funding for the bank's r
Amendment 312 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a (a) separate legal entities, with separate sources of funding for the bank's retail and purely financial investment entities;
Amendment 313 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point a a (new) (aa) rules to ensure that the executive and controlling bodies of these separate entities and their respective members act independently from each other and that members of the legal bodies of one entity cannot be members of the legal bodies of the other entity in the same group
Amendment 314 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point b (b)
Amendment 315 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point b (b) not unnecessarily limit
Amendment 316 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point b (b) limits on the extent to which the two entities are reliant on each other for funding and/or resources; in particular, there should be no legal basis for shifting capital and liquidity
Amendment 317 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point b (b) limits on the extent to which the two entities are reliant on each other for funding and/or resources; in particular, there should be no legal basis for shifting capital and liquidity from r
Amendment 318 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point b (b) limits on the extent to which the two entities are reliant on each other for funding and/or resources; in particular, there should be no legal basis for unduly and unnecessarily shifting capital and liquidity from ring-fenced entities to other entities in the group;
Amendment 319 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point b (b) limits on the extent to which the two entities are reliant on each other for funding and/or resources; in particular, there should be no legal basis for shifting capital and liquidity from ring-fenced entities to other entities in the group, and vice versa;
Amendment 32 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas the
Amendment 320 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point b a (new) (ba) Limits on the extent to which securitisation results in the expansion of unsustainable lending or investment in higher risk areas whether within or outside the group containing the originator;
Amendment 321 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point c Amendment 322 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point c (c) the application of adequate, thorough and separate capital, leverage and liquidity rules to each entity appropriately calibrated to the business models of those entities, including separate balance sheets;
Amendment 323 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point c (c) the application of adequate, thorough and separate capital, leverage and liquidity rules to each entity not subject to consolidated supervision, including separate balance sheets; or
Amendment 324 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d Amendment 325 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d (d) net and gross large exposure limits for intra-group transactions between
Amendment 326 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d (d) net and gross large exposure limits for intra-group transactions between ring- fenced and non-ring-fenced activities, which are at least as strict as those for third-party exposure,
Amendment 327 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d (d) net and gross large exposure limits for intra-group transactions between
Amendment 328 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d (d) not discriminate net and gross large exposure limits for intra-group transactions between
Amendment 329 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d (d) net and gross large exposure limits for intra-group transactions between
Amendment 33 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas the c
Amendment 330 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d (d) net and gross large exposure limits taking into account the operation of concentration limits for intra-group transactions between ring-
Amendment 331 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d (d) net and gross large exposure limits for intra-group transactions between ring- fenced and non-ring-fenced activities, which are at least as strict as those for third-party exposure, including strict limits on the exposure of
Amendment 332 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d a (new) (da) clear-cut rules serving to determine which activities are to be considered economically important. In particular, as regards market-making, criteria and indicators need to be laid down, depending on whether or not there is a market-maker standing ready on the market at all times or on the size of the orders concerned in relation to the market and proceeding from the necessary exact quantitative reference points (time threshold for continuous operation on the market, bid-ask spread, etc.), which should be adjusted according to the particular financial instruments involved. Revenue from market-making should come from fees, commission, and bid-ask spreads, rather than being generated by position price trends. The methods for calculating traders’ pay must not encourage risk-taking;
Amendment 333 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d a (new) (da) (ii) does not result in: (a) increasing dependency on non-EU banks or unregulated sources of funding; (b) increasing regulatory arbitrage (inside and outside the EU) and a global unlevel playing field; (c) a discrepancy between overly regulated retail banks and lite-regulated investment banks; (d) fragmentation of the internal market;
Amendment 334 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d a (new) (da) limits being placed on the possibility of risk transfer from entities engaged in retail activities to other entities, for example through debt securitisation;
Amendment 335 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 – point d b (new) (db) increasing the uneven level playing field for market makers in Europe at the benefit of other jurisdictions;
Amendment 336 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 a (new) 12a. Urges the commission to ensure that separation does not result in: (a) a fragmentation of the single market, in particular it should not entail disproportionate adverse effects on the whole or parts of the financial system in other Member States or of the EU as a whole forming or creating an obstacle to the functioning of the internal market or the free flow of capital; (b) excessive operational or infrastructure costs that would be passed onto the customer or consumer or pose an entry barrier to having a basic bank account; (c) becoming overly prescriptive;
Amendment 337 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 a (new) 12a. Stresses the crucially important role of banks as market makers in order to uphold liquidity and, thereby, reduce the funding costs for firms, public authorities and sovereigns; reminds of the significant technical difficulties in defining what is a "pure" market making activity; is concerned that with an inferior definition of market making activities, structural separation would have considerably detrimental effect to the smooth functioning of capital markets;
Amendment 338 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 a (new) 12a. Urges the Commission to consider the alternative approach resulting from the application of the future Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive, whereby structural separation can result from the resolvability assessment of the firm;
Amendment 339 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 Amendment 34 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas
Amendment 340 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Urges the Commission to take into account the ECB's proposal to establish clear and enforceable criteria for separation8 and to take in to account ECB's comment whereby it "sees merit in separating certain high risk activities of financial institutions that are not associated to the provision of client- related services" , its suggestion that such mandatory separation would require clear and enforceable criteria for separation and its recommendation to further analyse whether market-making activities should be allowed in the deposit taking entity;
Amendment 341 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Urges the Commission to take into account the ECB's proposal to establish clear and enforceable criteria for separation8 ; urges the Commission to identify services essential to the functioning of the real economy; argues that such services should be within the ringfence and that all other non essential services should be outside the ringfence to ensure they are priced by the market free from distortion by state guarantees and subsidies;
Amendment 342 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Urges the Commission to take into account the ECB's proposal to establish c
Amendment 343 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Urges the Commission to, if structural separation eventually was to be considered, take into account the ECB's proposal to establish clear and enforceable criteria for separation8 ;
Amendment 344 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Urges the Commission to take into account the ECB's proposal to establish clear and enforceable criteria
Amendment 345 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Urges the Commission to take into account the ECB's proposal in order to establish clear, complete and enforceable criteria for separation8
Amendment 346 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 a (new) 13a. Calls on the Commission to examine the extent to which the Volcker Rules applied in the USA and the recommendations of the Vickers Commission which are implemented in the UK could be applied EU-wide; considers it necessary to establish a separate EU banking system which takes into account national structures and social models which have evolved over time;
Amendment 347 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 a (new) 13a. Market making which provides an essential service to the clients should be allowed to remain in the deposit taking entity as it enables banks to support European corporate clients to gain access to the markets;
Amendment 348 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented by
Amendment 349 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented by both the retail and investment
Amendment 35 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas the current post-crisis weakness in the
Amendment 350 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented by both the retail and investment entities, as well as by the group as a whole
Amendment 351 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented
Amendment 352 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented by both the retail and
Amendment 353 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented by both
Amendment 354 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented by both the retail and investment
Amendment 355 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented by both the
Amendment 356 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented by both the r
Amendment 357 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Underlines the necessity of assessing the systemic risk presented by
Amendment 358 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 a (new) 14a. Stresses the need for enhanced macro-surveillance as one of the crucial aspects to mitigate risks in the interconnected EU banking sector;
Amendment 359 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the EBA and the Commission to ensure that
Amendment 36 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas the current
Amendment 360 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that
Amendment 361 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the retail entity has sufficient capital and liquid assets to enable it, in the event of the bank's failure, to maintain depositors' access to funds, to protect the essential services
Amendment 362 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the
Amendment 363 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the retail entity has sufficient capital and liquid assets to enable it, in the event of the bank's failure, to maintain depositors' access to a minimum of 100,000 Euro of their private funds, to protect the essential services of the ring-fenced arm from the risk of disorderly failure and to prioritise paying out depositors
Amendment 364 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the
Amendment 365 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the
Amendment 366 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the
Amendment 367 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the retail entity has sufficient capital, bail- inable liabilities and liquid assets to enable it, in the event of the bank's failure, to maintain depositors' access to funds, to protect the essential services of the ring- fenced arm from the risk of disorderly failure and to prioritise paying out depositors in a timely fashion;
Amendment 368 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the retail entity has sufficient capital and liquid assets to enable it, in the event of the bank's failure, to maintain depositors' access to funds, to protect the essential services of the ring-fenced arm from the risk of disorderly failure and to p
Amendment 369 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the retail entity has sufficient capital and liquid assets to enable it, in the event of the bank’s failure, to maintain depositors’ access to funds, to protect the essential services of the ring-fenced arm from the risk of disorderly failure and to prioritise paying out depositors
Amendment 37 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas the current post-crisis weakness
Amendment 370 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the r
Amendment 371 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 15. Urges the Commission to ensure that the retail entity has sufficient capital and liquid assets to enable it, in the event of the bank's failure, to maintain depositors' access to funds, to protect the essential services of the
Amendment 372 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 a (new) 15a. In order to ensure a consistent treatment across the EU, the EBA in cooperation with competent authorities, including the ECB, should play a key role in this context by developing relevant binding standards, including the calibration of the appropriate thresholds for mandatory separation to be applied by competent authorities.
Amendment 373 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 15 a (new) 15a. Urges the Commission to ensure that any form of separation should only be required in such circumstances where it is demonstrable that increased capital requirements would be not be sufficient mitigate the identified risks;
Amendment 374 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 Amendment 375 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Commission to ensure that adequate
Amendment 376 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges EBA and the Commission to ensure that adequate differentiation exists in terms of capital, leverage and liquidity requirements between the
Amendment 377 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Commission and competent supervisors to ensure that adequate differentiation exists in terms of capital, leverage and liquidity requirements between
Amendment 378 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Commission to ensure that adequate differentiation exists in terms of capital, leverage and liquidity requirements between the investment and
Amendment 379 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Commission to ensure that adequate differentiation exists in terms of capital, leverage, bail-inable liabilities and liquidity requirements between the
Amendment 38 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas the current post-crisis weakness in the structure of EU banks demonstrates th
Amendment 380 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Commission to ensure that adequate differentiation exists in terms of capital, leverage and liquidity requirements between the
Amendment 381 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Commission to ensure that adequate differentiation exists in terms of capital, leverage and liquidity requirements
Amendment 382 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Commission, within the bounds of CRD IV, to ensure that adequate differentiation exists in terms of capital, leverage and liquidity requirements between the investment and retail entities, with an emphasis on higher capital requirements for the investment entity;
Amendment 383 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Commission to ensure that adequate differentiation exists in terms of capital, leverage and liquidity requirements between the investment and retail
Amendment 384 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 16. Urges the Commission to ensure that adequate differentiation exists in terms of capital, leverage and liquidity requirements between the investment and retail entities, with an emphasis on higher capital requirements and higher capital buffers for the investment entity;
Amendment 385 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 a (new) 16a. Asks the Commission to develop rules limiting the size of groups and separate legal entities as well in the retail as in the commercial sphere. The size of the separated entities and the groups should be measured by the balance sheet and related to the GDP of the home member state and the funding of the to be established Recovery and Resolution Funds to prevent institutions form becoming too big or too interconnected to fail and to ensure that the respective means and measures are sufficient to recover failing institutes
Amendment 386 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 a (new) 16a. Urges the Commission, in order to manage the risks of loans for real estate operations more effectively, to ensure that limits on the size of loans are adopted in the Member States on the basis of the loan-to-value ratio of the property (LTV) or the loan-to-income ratio of the borrower (LTI) and form part of the instruments of micro- and macro- prudential supervision;
Amendment 387 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 a (new) 1a. In order to avoid circumvention of these structural measures, strict monitoring should take into account possible movement of activities outside the perimeter of regulation and supervision or lead to the relocation of activities to jurisdictions that are less stringent.
Amendment 388 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 a (new) 16a. Urges the Commission to assist in reaching an agreement on the proposed Deposit Guarantee Scheme Directive and to increase consumer protection by introducing depositor preference.
Amendment 389 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 a (new) 16a. Believes that the possible scope for allowing market-making to be carried out by the deposit taking entity, subject to certain limits, should be further analysed;
Amendment 39 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas the current post-crisis weakness in the structure of EU banks demonstrates the need for reform in order to serve
Amendment 390 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 b (new) 16b. Recalls that any structural reform does not remove the need for continuous supervision and, where necessary, adaptation of the legislation, through co- decision or implementing measures, while avoiding legislation which permits inconsistent transposition and application;
Amendment 391 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 b (new) 16b. Asks the Commission to require from banks with a balance sheet total above EUR 200 bn that at least 50% of their balance sheet be dedicated to lending to non financial entities and at least 33% to lending to GDP contributing activities and entities such as SMEs;
Amendment 392 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 16 c (new) 16c. Asks the Commission to assess the potential effects for lending to SMEs of a limitation of the size of banks by putting a cap on the size of assets that a bank can hold;
Amendment 393 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Calls on the Commission to
Amendment 394 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Calls on the Commission to
Amendment 395 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Considering the legal structure, the different European banking models and the principle of proportionality calls on the Commission to implement the proposals set out in the HLEG's report in the area of corporate governance of separated banks, including a) governance and control mechanisms, b) risk management, c) incentive schemes, d) risk disclosure and e) sanctions;
Amendment 396 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Calls on the Commission
Amendment 397 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 17 17. Calls on the Commission to implement the proposals set out in the HLEG's report in the area of corporate governance of separated banks, including a) governance and control mechanisms, b) risk management, c) incentive schemes, d) risk disclosure
Amendment 398 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 Amendment 399 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 Amendment 4 #
Motion for a resolution Citation 9 – having regard to the 2012 report of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) entitled ‘Implicit Guarantees for Bank Debt: Where Do We Stand?’2
Amendment 40 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas the current post-crisis weakness in the structure of EU banks demonstrates the need for reform in order to serve the wider needs of the economy
Amendment 400 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 Amendment 401 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19.
Amendment 402 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19. Urges the Commission to ensure that separation – where this was earmarked owing to the considerable share of the bank’s turnover attributable to investment entities – delivers independent decision- making and governance for each entity, with separate executive
Amendment 403 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19. Urges the Commission to ensure that separation delivers sufficiently independent decision-
Amendment 404 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 19 19. Urges the Commission to ensure that separation delivers independent decision- making and governance for each entity,
Amendment 405 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 Amendment 406 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 Amendment 407 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 Amendment 408 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 Amendment 409 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 Amendment 41 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D D. whereas
Amendment 410 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Calls on the Commission to include provisions establishing an obligation for all executive board members
Amendment 411 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Calls on the Commission to include provisions establishing an obligation for all
Amendment 412 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Calls on the Commission to include provisions establishing an obligation for all board members of the
Amendment 413 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Calls on the Commission to include provisions establishing an obligation for all board members
Amendment 414 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Calls on the Commission to include provisions establishing an obligation for all board members of the retail entity, both executive and non-executive, and all levels of management and risk-takers to originate from, and only have responsibility for, the retail entity and not the
Amendment 415 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21. Urges the Commission to include provisions introducing personal accountability and liability for board members on both sides of the ring fence and at group level; suggests that in this context the Commission should explore how to encourage a return to the partnership model of company management;
Amendment 416 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21.
Amendment 417 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21. Urges the Commission to
Amendment 418 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21.
Amendment 419 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 21 21. Urges the Commission to
Amendment 42 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D a (new) Da. whereas the 1933 US Glass-Steagall Act on banking separation helped to provide a way out of the worst global financial crisis to have occurred before the present crisis and whereas since the Act was repealed in 1999, there has been a considerable increase in speculative bank investment and financial failures;
Amendment 420 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 22 Amendment 421 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 22 22. Urges EBA and the Commission to
Amendment 422 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 22 22. Urges the Commission to continue the reform of banks' compensation and remuneration culture by prioritising long- term incentives for variable remuneration with larger deferral periods up to retirement as well as to promote transparency including at least explanations and assessments on internal remuneration spreads, relevant changes and comparative sectorial deviations;
Amendment 423 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 22 22. Urges the Commission to continue the reform of banks' compensation and remuneration culture by prioritising long-
Amendment 424 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 Amendment 425 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 Amendment 426 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Urges the Commission to ensure that remuneration systems prioritise the use of instruments such as bonds subject to bail- in, and shares, rather than cash; Urges the Commission to ensure that remuneration systems are aligned with international principles and effectively incentivise the use of deferred instruments such as bonds subject to bail-in, rather than cash, and shares which are subject to clawback for top management, but for also for all levels in the institutions;
Amendment 427 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Urges the Commission, EBA and the competent authorities to ensure that remuneration systems prioritise the use of instruments such as bonds subject to bail- in, and shares, rather than cash, in line with the provisions of the Capital Requirements Directive;
Amendment 428 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Urges the Commission to ensure that remuneration systems
Amendment 429 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Urges the Commission to ensure that remuneration systems prioritise the use of instruments such as bonds subject to bail- in, and shares, rather than cash, commissions or value-based items;
Amendment 43 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D a (new) D a. Whereas a number of important EU initiatives have been taken to prevent a new banking crisis, increase protection of tax payers and retail clients and create robust and sustainable payment systems.
Amendment 430 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 23. Urges the Commission to ensure that remuneration systems prioritise the use of instruments such as shares and bonds subject to bail-
Amendment 431 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 23 a (new) 23a. Urges the Commission to ensure that the banks' compensation and remuneration policy are transparent to investors and the public. Not all Member States have audit legislation that makes public the remuneration and compensation scheme in their annual reports. This is valuable information to the banks' investors as well as current and future customers;
Amendment 432 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 24 Amendment 433 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 24 Amendment 434 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 24 24. Urges the Commission, EBA and the competent authorities to ensure that compensation and remuneration systems at all levels of a bank reflect its overall performance and are focused on quality customer service and long-term financial stability rather than short-term profits, in line with the provisions of the Capital Requirements Directive;
Amendment 435 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 24 24. Urges the Commission to ensure that compensation and remuneration systems at all levels of a bank reflect its overall performance and are focused on quality customer service, social-economic and environmental impact and long-term financial stability rather than short-term profits;
Amendment 436 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 24 24. Urges the Commission to ensure that compensation and remuneration systems at all relevant levels of a bank reflect its overall performance and are focused on quality customer service and long-term financial stability rather than short-term profits;
Amendment 437 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 25 Amendment 438 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 Amendment 439 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 Amendment 44 #
Motion for a resolution Recital D a (new) D a. whereas banks should not be sovereign over public interest;
Amendment 440 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 Amendment 441 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 Amendment 442 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 26. Urges the Commission to make relevant provisions for national supervisors
Amendment 443 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 26. Urges the Commission to make provision for national supervisors, where appropriate in a coordinated manner with the single supervisory mechanism, to have the power to implement full and legal separation of banks;
Amendment 444 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 26. Urges the Commission to make provision for national supervisors to have the power to implement full and legal separation of banks in accordance with the Single Supervisory Mechanism;
Amendment 445 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 26. Urges the Commission to make provision for national supervisors, in cooperation with the EU authorities, to have the power to implement full and legal separation of banks;
Amendment 446 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 26 26. Urges the Commission to make provision for
Amendment 447 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 Amendment 448 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 27. Asks the Commission to propose that adequate resources and powers be allocated to
Amendment 449 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 a (new) 27a. Urges the Commission to conduct a study to ensure that accounting standards used by financial institutions give a genuinely true and fair view of banks' financial health; points out that accounts are the main source of information for an investor to understand whether or not a company is a going concern or not; notes that auditors can only sign off accounts if they are true and fair, independent of the financial standards used by preparers of financial statements; believes that if auditors are unsure that a company is a going concern they should not sign off the company's accounts, even if they have been drawn up in line with accounting standards; this should however be a driver of better management of the company in question; suggests that international financial reporting standards do not necessarily give a true and fair view of accounts, as shown by numerous examples of banks collapsing despite their accounts having been signed off by auditors;
Amendment 45 #
Motion for a resolution Recital E E. whereas the eighth (December 2012) edition of the Commission’s Consumer Markets Scoreboard clearly indicates that consumer trust in the EU in banking se
Amendment 452 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Stresses that effective competition is necessary in order to ensure a well- functioning and efficient banking sector which funds the
Amendment 453 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Stresses that effective and fair and sustainable competition is necessary in order to ensure a well-
Amendment 454 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Stresses that effective competition is necessary in order to ensure a well- functioning and efficient banking sector which serves consumers and funds the real economy by reducing the cost of banking services and that this requires the dominance of excessively large institutions to be reduced;
Amendment 455 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Stresses that effective competition is necessary in order to ensure a well- functioning and efficient banking sector which funds the real economy by ensuring universal access to banking services and reducing the cost of banking services;
Amendment 456 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Stresses that effective competition is necessary in order to ensure a well- functioning and efficient banking sector which f
Amendment 457 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Stresses that effective competition is necessary in order to ensure a well- functioning and efficient banking sector which
Amendment 458 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 28. Stresses that effective competition and EU bank competitiveness is necessary in order to ensure a well-
Amendment 459 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 a (new) 28a. Urges the Commission to require banks to explain to their customers when opening deposit accounts that their money is in fact loaned to the bank and is not necessarily on deposit; emphasises that customers be made fully aware of what their deposits are being spent on; suggests that such information should be given to the customer before the account is opened; argues that this will incentivise individuals to learn more about how risky a bank's business model is and will ensure consumers are fully aware of the risks of their money being left with the bank in question; notes that deposit guarantee schemes protect up to €100,000 but also notes that deposit guarantee schemes can be bypassed, that they are only as resilient as the state that stands behind them and that they encourage moral hazard;
Amendment 46 #
Motion for a resolution Recital E E. whereas the eighth (December 2012) edition of the Commission's Consumer Markets Scoreboard clearly indicates that consumer trust in the EU banking sector is at an all-time low and that the industry has high levels of noncompliance with consumer protection legislation5 and the consumers' confidence needs to be restored ;
Amendment 460 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 28 a (new) 28a. Urges the Commission to ensure that competition and an international level playing field is maintained and that any possible initiative does not lead to increased capital markets fragmentation within the EU or globally.
Amendment 461 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 Amendment 462 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Urges the Commission and the Member States to work together to promote greater diversification of the EU’s banking sector by encouraging and facilitating more consumer-oriented banking, for example through cooperative, building society, peer-to-peer lending and saving bank models; calls also for commercial banks and investment banks to be treated differently for tax purposes, favouring banks in the former category, taking into account their activities in support of the real economy and of small and medium- sized enterprises in particular;
Amendment 463 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Urges the Commission and the Member States to work together to promote greater
Amendment 464 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Urges the Commission and the Member States to work together to promote greater diversification of the EU's banking sector by encouraging and facilitating more consumer-oriented banking which is closed to the territory of the banking activities and the real economy, for example through cooperative, building society, peer-to-peer lending and saving bank models;
Amendment 465 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 29. Urges the Commission and the Member States to work together to promote greater diversification and competition of the EU's banking sector by encouraging and facilitating more
Amendment 466 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 a (new) 29a. Notes that, in order to boost the competitiveness and stability of the European banking system, it is vital to address effectively the issue of systemically important financial institutions (i.e. those that are too big to fail), whose problems resulted in an escalation of the adverse effects of the financial crisis, by rationalising the scale of the activities of banking groups and by reducing dependency where groups are concerned;
Amendment 467 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 29 a (new) 29a. Urges the Commission to find ways to encourage and promote 'relationship lending' or 'knowledge based lending' in legislative initiatives. These should aim to avoid a 'tick box' approach and focus instead on promoting vocational and ethical training for those who intermediate and lend to businesses;
Amendment 468 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Urges the Member States to ensure that their national supervisors have the clear objective of promoting
Amendment 469 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Urges the
Amendment 47 #
Motion for a resolution Recital E a (new) Ea. whereas the recent bailout package in Cyprus originally included a tax on all bank deposits, thereby undermining confidence in the deposit guarantee scheme of that country;
Amendment 470 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Urges the Member States to ensure that their national supervisors
Amendment 471 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Urges the Member States to ensure that their national supervisors have the clear objective of promoting effective competition in their banking sectors as well as having the legal basis for implementing a separation of the banking system;
Amendment 472 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Urges the
Amendment 473 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 30 30. Urges the Member States to ensure that their national supervisors, in cooperation with EU authorities, have the clear objective of promoting effective competition in their banking sectors;
Amendment 474 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 Amendment 475 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Asks the Commission to bring forward measures to
Amendment 476 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Asks the Commission to bring forward measures to facilitate consumer switching between banks, limit excessive market power in card services and assist in improving consumer choice in the banking sector by banning tied practices, reducing the barriers to entry and exit and applying proportionate rules to new entrants to the market;
Amendment 477 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Asks the Commission to bring forward measures to ensure access to basic banking services to all consumers, to facilitate consumer switching between banks and assist in improving consumer choice in the banking sector by reducing the barriers to entry and exit and applying proportionate rules to new entrants to the market;
Amendment 478 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Asks the Commission to bring forward measures to facilitate consumer switching between banks including the idea of bank account number portability and assist in improving consumer choice in the banking sector by reducing the barriers to entry and exit and applying proportionate rules to new entrants to the market;
Amendment 479 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 31 31. Asks the Commission to bring forward measures to facilitate consumer switching between banks and assist in improving consumer choice in the banking sector by reducing the barriers to entry and exit, a transferable bank account number or customer 'LEI' and applying proportionate rules to new entrants to the market;
Amendment 48 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F Amendment 480 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 Amendment 481 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 32.
Amendment 482 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 32. Calls on the Commission to bring forward the necessary structural reforms outlined in this report,
Amendment 483 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 32. Calls on the Commission to
Amendment 484 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 32. Calls on the Commission to bring forward the necessary structural reforms outlined in this report
Amendment 485 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 32. Calls on the Commission to bring forward the necessary structural reforms outlined in this report, which, while maintaining the integrity of the internal market, respect the diversity of national banking systems and ensure
Amendment 486 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 32 a (new) 32a. Asks the Commission to conduct a thorough impact assessment on the recommendations of the HLEG, thereby taking into account legislation already adopted and initiated at the European level, and to also include alternatives to separation models in this assessment, such as higher regulatory requirements for proprietary trading and other high- risk trading activities;
Amendment 49 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F Amendment 5 #
Motion for a resolution Citation 10 a (new) - Having regard to the Eurogroup Statement of 25 March 2013 regarding the crisis in Cyprus2 __________________ 2 http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/c ms_data/docs/pressdata/en/ecofin/136487. pdf
Amendment 50 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F F. whereas
Amendment 51 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F F. whereas research by the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) suggests that once bank assets exceed a country's GDP, its financial sector has a negative impact on economic growth, as human and financial resources are drained from other areas of economic activity6 ; also notes that the ability for any country to withstand the fallout from a collapse of such a systemically relevant bank will be called into question and that the fiscal health of the country in question will be severely undermined;
Amendment 52 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F F. whereas research by the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) suggests that once bank assets exceed a country's GDP, its financial sector has a negative impact on economic growth, as human and financial resources are drained from other areas of economic activity6 . Nevertheless, other reports (IMF) indicate economies can benefit from specialisation; further, with regard to banking it is the domestic exposure rather than the total sector size that should be considered for affordability;
Amendment 53 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F F. whereas research by the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) suggests that once bank assets exceed a country's GDP, its financial sector has a negative impact on economic growth, as human and financial resources are drained from other areas of economic activity6
Amendment 54 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F F. whereas research by the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) suggests that once bank assets markedly exceed a country’s GDP
Amendment 55 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F F. whereas research by the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) suggests that once bank assets exceed a country's GDP, its financial sector
Amendment 56 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F a (new) Fa. whereas, in relation to the crisis in Cyprus, the Eurogroup has confirmed the principle that the size of the banking sector relative to [a Member State's] GDP should be limited in order to address banking sector imbalances and promote financial stability, from which it follows that, in the absence of substantial EU- level funds for resolution, limits on the size, complexity and interconnectedness of banks will be beneficial to systemic stability;
Amendment 57 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F a (new) Fa. whereas the pure separation of financial institutions to investment- and retail branches does not address the problem concerning SIFIs and the relation between the volume of the Recovery and Resolution Fund on the one hand and the balance of institutions systemically relevant for credit, payment and deposit on the other;
Amendment 58 #
Motion for a resolution Recital F a (new) Fa. Whereas the transformation process towards a more sustainable, less systemic and viable banking sector seems to differ between members states.
Amendment 59 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G. whereas the HLEG concludes that the financial crisis has demonstrated th
Amendment 6 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A A. whereas
Amendment 60 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G. whereas the financial crisis demonstrated the problem of cross- contamination between banks' retail and investment activities; whereas the report of the HLEG underlines that "there are important systemic benefits of having diversity of business models" and the Eurosystem states in its contribution of January 2013 that "diversity implies that different institutional forms, business and earnings models coexist which strengthens resilience and mitigates contagion vulnerabilities";
Amendment 61 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G. whereas the financial crisis
Amendment 62 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G.
Amendment 63 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G. whereas the financial crisis demonstrated the problem of
Amendment 64 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G. whereas the financial crisis demonstrated the problem of cross- contamination between banks’
Amendment 65 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G. whereas
Amendment 66 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G. whereas the financial crisis demonstrated the problem of cross- contamination between banks' retail and investment activities, whilst also noting that 'risky' activities took place in both retail and investment arms of banks;
Amendment 67 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G. whereas the financial crisis demonstrated the problem of potential cross-
Amendment 68 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G G. whereas the financial crisis demonstrated the problem of
Amendment 69 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G a (new) Ga. whereas the HLEG underlines that simple labels, such as retail bank or investment bank, do not adequately describe the business model of a bank and its performance and riskiness; whereas business models are diverse along different key dimensions, such as size, activities, income model, capital and funding structure, ownership, corporate structure, and geographic scope, and have evolved substantially over time;
Amendment 7 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A A. whereas the Commission
Amendment 70 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G a (new) Ga. whereas more banks have had significant losses from the types of activities that are supposed to remain in the deposit bank, in particular real estate lending, than those caused by losses in trading related activities, let alone market making in fixed-income markets.
Amendment 71 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G a (new) Ga. Whereas it became clear that risks can originate in both the retail, as well as in the investment part of the bank.
Amendment 72 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G b (new) Amendment 73 #
Motion for a resolution Recital G c (new) Gc. whereas there is little evidence to support that a mandatory separation into trading banks and deposit banks would have helped to prevent the financial crisis or even ease the consequences. Had the global banking system carried more capital, bigger liquidity buffers and longer term funding the crisis would have had less severe consequences.
Amendment 74 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H H. whereas the Commission proposal should provide for a strong, stable and resilient banking sector for the internal market while respecting the diversity
Amendment 75 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H H. whereas all upcoming legislative initiatives by the Commission
Amendment 76 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H H. whereas the Commission proposal should provide for a strong, stable and resilient banking sector with access to a variety of funding sources for the internal market while respecting the diversity of the Member States' banking sectors
Amendment 77 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H H. whereas
Amendment 78 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H H. whereas the Commission proposal should provide for a strong, stable, competitive, transparent and
Amendment 79 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H H. whereas
Amendment 8 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A A. whereas the Commission estimates that
Amendment 80 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H H. whereas a legislative proposal by the Commission
Amendment 81 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H a (new) Ha. whereas the Commission proposal should provide for a principles based approach to structural reforms of the European banking sector consistent with, and complementary to, already existing and forthcoming Union legislation for financial services; whereas EBA should play a key role by developing relevant technical standards to ensure consistent application and enforcement by the competent authorities, including the ECB, across the Union;
Amendment 82 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H a (new) Ha. whereas decentralised local and regional institutions within the banking sector in the Member States have shown themselves to be stable and beneficial in terms of financing the real economy;
Amendment 83 #
Motion for a resolution Recital H a (new) Ha. whereas it is necessary that banks hold higher levels and better quality of capital; have greater liquidity buffers and longer-term funding.
Amendment 84 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas
Amendment 85 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas, since it is neither feasible nor desirable to effect a bank separation post- failure, an effective recovery and resolution regime is needed in order to provide authorities with a credible set of tools, including a bridge bank, so that they can intervene sufficiently early and quickly in an unsound or failing bank to enable its essential financial and economic functions to continue, while minimising the impact on financial stability and ensuring that appropriate losses are imposed on the shareholders and creditors who bore the risk of investing in the institution in question, and not by taxpayers or depositors; whereas such recovery and resolution plans are not necessary for other types of private company, suggesting that there is a specific problem with the market in financial services; whereas if the market were functioning properly, financial institutions would be able to fail without any need for a recovery and resolution plan; whereas therefore the problem lies within the structures and interconnections between financial institutions;
Amendment 86 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas, since it is neither feasible nor desirable to effect a bank separation post- failure, an effective recovery and resolution regime is needed in order to provide authorities with a credible set of
Amendment 87 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas
Amendment 88 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas, since it is neither feasible nor desirable to effect a bank separation post- failure, an effective recovery and resolution regime as currently discussed in the legislative procedure on the Recovery and Resolution Directive is needed in order to provide authorities with a credible set of tools, including a bridge bank, so that they can intervene sufficiently early and quickly in an unsound or failing bank to enable its essential financial and economic functions to continue, while minimising the impact on financial stability and ensuring that appropriate losses are imposed on the shareholders and creditors who bore the risk of investing in the institution in question, and not by taxpayers or depositors;
Amendment 89 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas, since it is neither feasible nor desirable to effect a bank separation post- failure, an effective recovery and resolution regime is needed in order to provide authorities with a credible set of tools, including pre-defined bail-inable debt instruments and a bridge bank, so that they can intervene sufficiently early and quickly in an unsound or failing bank to enable its essential financial and economic functions
Amendment 9 #
Motion for a resolution Recital A A.
Amendment 90 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I I. whereas, since it is neither feasible nor desirable to effect a bank separation post- failure, an effective recovery and resolution regime is needed in order to provide authorities with a credible set of tools, including a bridge bank, so that they can intervene sufficiently early and quickly in an unsound or failing bank to enable its essential financial and economic functions to continue, while minimising the impact on financial stability and ensuring that appropriate losses are imposed on the shareholders and creditors who bore the risk of investing in the institution in question, and not by taxpayers or insured depositors;
Amendment 91 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I a (new) Ia. whereas supervisory and resolution authorities must be given the requisite authority to be able effectively to remove impediments to the resolvability of credit institutions and the banks must be forced to prove their resolvability; whereas the introduction of compulsory recovery and resolutions regimes provides an opportunity to influence the banking structure, reduce the complexity of institutions and restrict or terminate business sectors and products;
Amendment 92 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I a (new) Ia. whereas, with regard to ending the implicit guarantee that many banks enjoy, one of the most important tools in the recovery and resolution regime proposed by the Commission is the power for authorities to intervene early, well before the point of non-viability, to require banks to change their business strategy, size or risk profile so that they can be resolvable without recourse to extraordinary public financial support;
Amendment 93 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I a (new) Ia. whereas banks should never be so big anymore that their failure causes systemic risks for the entire economy and therefore requiring the government and tax payers to rescue them, thus bringing the too-big- to-fail problem to an end;
Amendment 94 #
Motion for a resolution Recital I a (new) Ia. whereas banks must no longer reach such a size – even in one single Member State – that they constitute a systemic risk in a nation state with taxpayers having to bear the cost of losses;
Amendment 95 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J Amendment 96 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J J. whereas the EU banking sector remains highly concentrated: 14 European banking groups are global systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs), and 15 European banks
Amendment 97 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J J. whereas the EU banking sector remains highly concentrated: the total assets of the banking sector in the EU amount to EUR 43 trillion, which represents 349% of EU-27 GDP. 14 European banking groups are global systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs), and 15 European banks
Amendment 98 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J J. whereas the EU banking sector remains highly concentrated: 14 European banking groups are global systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs), and 15 European banks own 43 % of the market (in terms of asset size) and represent 150 % of EU-27 GDP, with individual Member States citing even higher ratios; whereas the ratio of bank size to GDP has tripled since 2000; whereas there is a huge degree of diversity in the European banking sector both in terms of size and business model;
Amendment 99 #
Motion for a resolution Recital J a (new) Ja. whereas currently the state guarantees and implicitly subsidises the whole financial system via liquidity support, deposit guarantee schemes and nationalisation programmes; whereas it is only appropriate for the state to guarantee essential services that ensure the smooth running of the real economy, such as payment systems and overdraft facilities; whereas structural reform is simply about ensuring the state only guarantees essential services and that non essential services are priced by the market;
source: PE-508.304
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