ECB publishes its opinion on the Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM)

08 November 2013

The ECB fully supports the establishment of an SRM. It believes that centralised decision-making on resolution matters will strengthen the stability of EMU, and that the SRM will provide a necessary complement to the SSM.


The European Central Bank (ECB) published its legal opinion on the Single Resolution Mechanism. This opinion was issued at the request of the Council of the European Union and the European Parliament.

The ECB fully supports the establishment of a Single Resolution Mechanism. It believes that centralised decision-making on resolution matters will strengthen the stability of Economic and Monetary Union and that the SRM will provide a necessary complement to the single supervisory mechanism.

The proposed SRM Regulation contains three essential requirements for effective resolution:

The ECB considers it crucial that the responsibilities of the resolution and supervisory authorities are kept distinct. The ECB, or the national competent authorities, in line with the Regulation on the single supervisory mechanism, should be solely responsible for assessing whether a credit institution is failing or likely to fail. The supervisory assessment will therefore be a necessary precondition for putting an institution into resolution.

The ECB welcomes the EU Council’s call to adopt the legislation within the European Parliament’s current term. Furthermore, it strongly supports the envisaged timeline for the SRM to become effective as of 1 January, 2015. Once the single supervisory mechanism is operational and supervision is elevated to the European level, the same needs to happen for resolution.

The ECB also supports an earlier implementation of the bail-in tool, which is a key element of the Bank Resolution and Recovery Directive.

The ECB notes the efforts undertaken to introduce the changes necessary to be able to use Article 114 (“approximation of national provisions”) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union as a possible legal basis. This would make the establishment of the SRM possible without the need for a Treaty change.

The ECB’s opinion states that it is better to maintain a clear functional separation between supervision and resolution, thereby avoiding potential conflicts of interest. The ECB recommends participating in the executive as well as plenary sessions of the Single Resolution Board as an observer.

Press release

Full opinion


In saying that the new bank bailout authority should be centralised and cover all eurozone banks, the ECB has put itself on a crash course with Berlin on the future of the EU’s Banking Union, comments Peter Spiegel in the FT.

He says that the stance puts the bank in direct conflict with Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister, who has repeatedly said the EU’s new bank bailout system should start as a “network” of national authorities because EU treaties do not allow for a single decision-maker for all of Europe.

In addition, Berlin has pushed for the system to be responsible only for the largest eurozone banks, something the ECB said it was opposed to.

Further reporting © FT (subscription required)


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