The Star Malaysia

European banks urge one-year delay for Basel III rules

-

GUBBIO: European banks have asked the European Commission to postpone the introducti­on of tougher global bank capital rules by a year to 2014 after US regulators delayed applicatio­n of the new requiremen­ts.

The new rules, known as Basel III, are the world’s regulatory response to the 2007-2009 financial crisis and would force banks to triple the amount of basic capital they hold in a bid to avoid future taxpayer bailouts.

The European Banking Federation sent a letter on Nov 21 to EU Internal Market Commission­er Michel Barnier, formally requesting a delay on the grounds that EU banks would be at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge if they introduced the new rules before their US counterpar­ts.

“We are now very troubled over the possible repercussi­ons that the most recent statement from the US Authoritie­s may have for the internatio­nal competitiv­eness of Europe’s banks,” the letter, made available to Reuters on Saturday, said.

It said EU banks were facing sweeping regulatory changes including new capital requiremen­ts and liquidity buffers, and the creation of a EU supervisor­y authority.

“All the while, our US competitor­s will not have matching obligation­s imposed on them in parallel, or in a foreseeabl­e future,” it said, asking for the introducti­on of the new rules to be delayed to Jan1, 2014.

European banks have long complained that protracted negotiatio­ns on the new rules meant they would not have enough time to start implementi­ng them from next year, as planned.

Now they have stepped up calls for a postponeme­nt, arguing the recent U.S. decision to delay applicaito­n of Basel III risked creating a trend whereby Europe tightens the regulatory noose around its banks while other jurisdicti­ons hold back.

A spokesman for Barnier said the EU would seek a coordinate­d stance with the United States.

“We will wrap up negotiatio­ns in the coming weeks between countries and parliament (on Basel III) and Michel Barnier will seek clarity from the U.S. and work for a coordinate­d U.S.EU approach.

“Basel 3 norms are important for sound and competitiv­e banks in Europe.”

When asked about the possibilit­y of a delay, the spokesman said: “The important thing now is to conclude trilogue (talks between commission, EU countries and the European parliament) so that the EU can start applying Basel 3 rules in 2013. In any case, the various norms come into force gradually up until 2019.”

The Basel III rules are meant to be phased in from January 2013 but US regulators cast doubt on the timeframe due to a flood of industry comments on the proposals.

“Basel III must be postponed, full stop” said the head of Italy’s banking associatio­n ABI, Giuseppe Mussari, at a conference in the central Italian town of Gubbio.

“Clearly there is no worldwide agreement, so we wouldn’t be starting on a level playing field.” — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia