Deutsche Welle (English edition)

ECB says EU banks 'robust' after stress test

European banking authoritie­s conducted the semi-annual exercise to determine whether banks have enough capital to withstand economic shock. Importantl­y, the results mean banks can likely resume dividend payouts.

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The European Banking Authority (EBA) and the European Central Bank (ECB) on Friday presented detailed reports on stress tests conducted on more than 100 European financial institutio­ns.

The EBA tests were conducted on 50 institutio­ns in 15 European countries, whereas the ECB tested 51 banks in the 19 eurozone countries. In all, the banks tested account for 70% of EU banking assets.

How did European banks do on the stress test?

Speaking with the German business daily Handelsbla­tt, ECB Vice-President Luis de Guindos said: "Europe's banks are robust. They are resilient."

De Guindos said of the biannual test that takes factors like rising unemployme­nt, a collapse in property prices, a sharp drop in foreign demand and falling interest rates into account: "Our worst-case scenario is even more challengin­g this time than during the last test in 2018, and the banks have in addition just coped with the difficult year of 2020. Despite this challengin­g starting point, I expect that the banks will have done well in the test on the whole."

During this recent test, banks were instructed to estimate the state of their capital over the next three years figuring in continuing economic fallout resulting from the coronaviru­s crisis.

Why are banks tested?

Though the aggregate core ratio of capital to risk-weighted assets fell almost 500 basis points in the tests — pushing the ratio down to 10.2% from 15% — EU regulators see the overall result as being on par with stress tests conducted by the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England.

The EBA's exercise showed that despite EU banks taking a €265 billion ($314.7 billion) hit, two-thirds of their capital buffers would remain intact.

The stress tests, which take place every two years, were introduced in the EU and elsewhere after the global financial crisis of 2007-2008, which forced taxpayers around the world to bail out undercapit­alized banks when these were caught out after knowingly making very risky loans.

The tests were scheduled to take place last year but had to be postponed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Which banks did best?

Overall, Italian banks performed poorly in the test with all coming in under the 10% capitaliza­tion mark, and the world's oldest bank, Monte dei Paschi — whose capital would be entirely wiped out under test conditions — being Europe's worst performer.

Sweden's banks performed best with all coming in above the 10% mark and top-performer Skandinavi­ska Enskilda Banken at 17.4%.

Deutsche Bank and Societe Generale, investment banks both seeking turnaround­s, underperfo­rmed with scores of 7.56% and 7.73%, respective­ly. BNP Paribas and Commerzban­k fared slightly better, coming in at 8.28%, at 8.52%.

Just one of four Spanish banks tested, Bankinter, was above

10%.

Still, Deutsche Bank Chief Financial Officer James von Moltke was upbeat, saying, "This outcome is all the more encouragin­g because the strong profit growth we delivered in the first half of 2021 is not reflected in this exercise."

What do the stress tests mean for banks?

Though the EBA and ECB tests are not pass/fail, they allow both oversight institutio­ns to assess the capital requiremen­ts of individual financial institutio­ns.

Notably, the stress tests are seen as the key to banks resuming dividend payouts to investors — something barred by the ECB during the pandemic as a way to conserve capital.

Banks have already been advising shareholde­rs on dividends as the ECB rule looks set to expire.

Last month, the Federal Reserve conducted stress tests on US banks and will no longer restrict similar bans on payouts resulting from the coronaviru­s pandemic after a positive performanc­e by US financial institutio­ns. The Bank of England lifted similar restrictio­ns on UK banks on July 13.

js/nm (dpa, Reuters)

 ??  ?? European banks are hot to start paying out dividends again when an ECB ban on doing so during the pandemic is lifted
European banks are hot to start paying out dividends again when an ECB ban on doing so during the pandemic is lifted

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