New Europe: French lenders win a major regulatory case against the ECB

15 July 2018

The European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled that banks may regard capital held against customer deposits as part of their overall reserves. Under EU rules, banks must have capital buffers worth at least 3% of their total assets.

Until Friday, French banks were forced to maintain an additional capital buffer for certain savings accounts, deposited with the state-owned Caisse des Dépôts (CDC) fund. Since the financial crisis, these funds were not included in the overall 3% calculation.

The ECB argued that these funds should not be taken into account because in the event of a liquidity crisis the state-owned CDC fund may not be able to immediately transfer the capital required to the individual lender.

French banks argued that they should not assume the cost of this risk on behalf of the French state. The ECJ ruled that the ECB’s supervisory board, headed by Ms Danièle Nouy, misinterpreted the law.

All major French lenders have leverage ratios well above the 3% benchmark, but lenders have argued that the rule lead to an inefficient use of capital. The ruling means that the bottom line of all systemic lenders will look more robust.

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