ECB's Nouy statement at the Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee hearing

19 June 2017

Danièle Nouy, Chair of the Supervisory Board of the ECB, addressed the supervisory implications of Brexit, NPLs, as well as some crucial issues in the risk reduction package which is currently under discussion in the Council and in the Parliament.

Non-performing loans

The quality of banks’ assets continues to be a serious challenge in the banking union as a whole, but the problem is also concentrated in certain countries. Large volumes of non-performing loans, or NPLs, are contributing to low bank profitability and making banks less able to provide new financing to the real economy.

In March of this year, following an extensive public consultation process, the ECB published its guidance on NPLs, which is applicable to all significant institutions. This guidance requires banks with high levels of NPLs to implement ambitious and realistic strategies for reducing the level of NPLs in a timely manner. This supervisory initiative has already started to bear fruit across banks and countries.

Furthermore, ECB is looking into more forward-looking solutions to avoid any such build-up of NPLs in the future. One important condition for ensuring a reduction of NPLs and preventing their future build-up is for supervisors to have sufficient powers to ensure that banks make timely prudential provisions for losses resulting from NPLs. ECB has highlighted the need to strengthen such powers already to the Commission and the Council and to your Committee most recently during the hearing on the banking legislation package in May.

Brexit

Since the 2016 vote by the United Kingdom to leave the EU, the ECB has been preparing for the consequences of this decision. First, ECB is making sure that euro area banks, in particular those with subsidiaries or branches in the United Kingdom but also those with other business ties to the country, have adequate contingency plans in place and are preparing for the possibility of a “hard Brexit”. Second, the ECB is preparing for all operational aspects related to a possible relocation of UK-based banks to the euro area.

Key issues of the banking legislation package from the supervisory perspective

ECB’s key concerns.

Full statement


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