European Parliament: Precautionary recapitalisations under the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive: conditionality and case practice

16 June 2017

This briefing focuses on the possibility provided by the BRRD to recapitalize a bank outside resolution. It explains the legal framework, in particular the conditionality attached to such precautionary recapitalisations, and reviews the few cases where the use of this instrument was discussed.

To reduce the cost of bank failures for taxpayers, the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD) provides that resolution costs should be first and foremost borne by banks’ shareholders and creditors.


To that end, the BRRD:

Indeed, in line with article 32.4 BRRD, the provision of extraordinary public support entails the recognition that the beneficiary bank is failing or likely to fail, thereby triggering its liquidation or its winding down under regular insolvency proceedings.


However some flexibility was introduced by the legislators to allow for targeted measures aiming at promoting financial stability, and to cater for systemic liquidity shortages or situations where a solvent bank would be unable to raise capital privately in the markets following a stress test or a comprehensive assessment.


Three specific forms of extraordinary public support are thereby allowed outside resolution:

Full briefing


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