Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

European banks urge one year delay for Basel III rules

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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 told lenders they did not expect the new regulation­s to take effect in 2013.

The tougher rules, known as Basel III, are the world’s regulatory response to the 2007-09 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 rules on 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 Jan 1, 2014.

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 US and work for a coordinate­d US-EU approach. Basel 3 norms are important for sound and competitiv­e banks in Europe.” 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, 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.”

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