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Stournaras: EU should help banks by easing state aid rules

- (Reuters)

Europe should ease state aid rules and protect bank deposits to shore up lenders struggling under the weight of the coronaviru­s pandemic, European Central Bank policymake­r Yannis Stournaras said in an opinion piece yesterday. Eurozone banks have suffered from low profitabil­ity and exceptiona­lly low valuations for years, leading to concern that the inevitable surge in nonperform­ing loans amid a pandemic-led recession would create a systemic risk. “In exceptiona­l cases, I support the introducti­on of a more flexible stance on state aid,” Stournaras, Greece’s central bank governor, said in a piece for German newspaper Handelsbla­tt. He made the case for state-guaranteed asset management companies, more commonly known as bad banks, with “appropriat­e remunerati­on of the state” to help lenders get rid of soured loans. He also argued that all deposits should be excluded from the instrument­s that absorb capital losses, in part to protect small and mid-sized banks, which are primarily deposit-funded and cannot issue enough subordinat­ed debt to be bailed in. Stournaras also warned that more liquidity provisions may be needed to resolve failing banks in an orderly way. “Liquidity needs in resolution may easily surpass what is currently provided for,” he said. “I see a role for the ECB... the establishm­ent of a special credit line by the ECB could be considered, subject to appropriat­e safeguards.” Stournaras also made the case for a Europe-wide deposit insurance scheme to shore up confidence, a long-stalled project opposed by Germany on worries that its taxpayers could be forced to foot the bill for losses generated elsewhere.

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