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Capital requirements

 

Rules on capital requirements for credit institutions and investment firms aim to put in place a comprehensive and risk-sensitive framework and to foster enhanced risk management amongst financial institutions.

The rules are meant to ensure financial stability, maintain confidence in financial institutions and protect consumers.

On 15 May 2012, the European Council agreed to a general approach on two proposals - the so called "CRD IV" package - amending the EU's rules on capital requirements for banks and investment firms, with a view to negotiations with the European Parliament.

The proposals set out to amend and replace the existing capital requirement directives by two new legislative instruments: a regulation establishing prudential requirements that institutions need to respect and a directive governing access to deposit-taking activities.

They are aimed at transposing into EU law an international agreement approved by the G-20 in November 2010. The so-called Basel III agreement, concluded by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, strengthens bank capital requirements, introduces a mandatory capital conservation buffer and a discretionary countercyclical buffer, and foresees a framework for new regulatory requirements on liquidity and leverage.

The Commission's proposals for the CRD IV have three concrete goals :

  • Requiring banks to hold more and better capital to resist future shocks by themselves.
  • Setting up a new governance framework giving supervisors new powers to monitor banks more closely and take action through possible sanctions when they spot risks, for example to reduce credit when it looks like it's growing into a bubble.
  • Establishing a Single Rule Book for banking regulation by putting together all legislation applicable on this matter. The aim is to improve transparency and enforcement.

The Regulation contains the detailed prudential requirements for credit institutions and investment firms and it covers:

  • capital

  • liquidity
  • leverage ratio

  • counter party credit risk
  • single rule book



The new Directive covers areas of the current Capital Requirements Directive where EU provisions need to be transposed by Member States in a way suitable to their own environment, such as the requirements for access to the taking up and pursuit of the business of banks, the conditions for their exercise of the freedom of establishment and the freedom to provide services, and the definition of competent authorities and the principles governing prudential supervision.



New elements in this directive are:



  • enhanced governance

  • sanctions
  • capital buffers
  • enhanced supervision

Articles

  • 15/05/2012

    The Council unanimously agreed on 15 May 2012 a general approach on two proposals - the socalled "CRD 4" package - amending the EU's rules on capital requirements for banks and investment firms, with a view to negotiations with the European Parliament.

    The proposals set out to amend and replace the existing capital requirement directives by two new legislative instruments: a regulation establishing prudential requirements that institutions need to respect and a directive governing access to deposit-taking activities.

  • 15/05/2012

    "Maintenant plus que jamais, nous avons besoin d'unité sur la réglementation des banques. Une capitalisation trop faible, des règles sur la liquidité non-harmonisées et défaillantes et une supervision trop fragmentée et mal-coordonnée ont toutes été des causes de la crise."

  • 14/05/2012

    Bank capital requirements must be strengthened to make banks more risk-resilient and the risk weighting of loans to small firms must be reduced to facilitate lending to the real economy, said Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee MEPs in a vote on 14 May 2012.

  • 03/05/2012

    Déclaration du Commissaire Barnier suite au Conseil Ecofin du 2 mai 2012 consacré à la CRD 4 (Capital Requirements Directive 4).

  • 02/05/2012

    Le ministre des Finances Luc Frieden se rend ce 2 mai à Bruxelles pour une réunion extraordinaire de l’Ecofin sur la réforme des fonds propres réglementaires. Il s’agit d’une part de la proposition de directive (CRD 4) régissant l'accès à l’activité d’établissement de crédit et d’autre part du règlement (CRR) définissant les exigences prudentielles applicables aux établissements de crédit et aux entreprises d'investissement.

  • 02/05/2012

    NSAs responsible for the supervision of the banks falling under the scope of the EBA Recommendation have provided the details of the mitigating measures taken for the respective banks and of their close monitoring of banks as a part of ongoing supervisory activities.

  • 05/04/2012

    The EBA published on 4th April 2012 a first report on the results of the Basel III monitoring exercise, as a follow-up to the comprehensive European quantitative impact study conducted to analyse the impact of the new requirements and published in December 2010.

  • 03/04/2012

    The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision has published on 3 April 2012 its second progress report on Basel III implementation. The report outlines the progress of individual member countries in transforming the Committee's regulatory standards into national law or regulation according to the internationally agreed timeframes.

  • 19/12/2011

    The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision published on 19 December 2011 for consultation a set of requirements for banks to disclose the composition of their regulatory capital. These aim to improve the transparency and comparability of banks' capital bases, including on a cross border basis.

  • 04/11/2011

    The rules text sets out the Basel Committee's framework on the assessment methodology for global systemic importance, the magnitude of additional loss absorbency that global systemically important banks (G-SIBs) should have and the arrangements by which the requirement will be phased in.  The work of the Basel Committee forms part of a broader effort by the Financial Stability Board to reduce the moral hazard of global systemically important institutions.

   
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