Brussels, 17 December 2024 – The European Banking Federation (EBF) has published Facts & Figures 2024, its annual update on the banking sector in Europe. Building on 2023 data from the European Central Bank (ECB), the statistical publication provides users with a unique perspective on the structure, performance, lending, and deposit trends in European banking alongside a country-by-country overview.
The Banking statistics for 2023 show that the total value of loans outstanding from EU MFIs decreased by 0.37% in 2023 to about €26.8 trillion. Also, total deposits from businesses and households grew by around 1.2% to €17.3 trillion in the EU. Deposits from households rose by 1.4% compared to a year earlier, while business deposits decreased by 0.1%. Data also confirms the upward trend in the total assets held by EU banks, expanding in 2023 for the sixth consecutive year and amounting to €43.6 trillion. Findings include a slight decrease in reliance on deposits as a source of funding with the share of deposit liabilities over total assets reaching about 57% last year.
While European banks have proven resilient and capable of overcoming unforeseen conditions, the structural transformation of the sector continued in 2023 with the intent of increasing efficiency and enhancing profitability. The total number of credit institutions declined to 5,304 in 2023, representing a 2.9% decrease compared to the previous year and reflecting a significant contraction over the last 15 years. The rationalization is due to the digitalization of banking services as well as the transformation programs by European banks to respond to customers’ evolving banking behaviors and enhance efficiency in processes. This restructuring also impacted branches with the number of banks’ branches falling to about 129,400, a decline of 2.4% compared to a year earlier.
Banking activities continue to significantly contribute to the EU economy. Despite the drop in bank employment, one in every 100 jobs in the EU is still in banking, with the banking sector employing over 2 million people by end-2023.
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For more information please contact:
Francisco Saravia
Senior Policy Adviser – Prudential Policy & Supervision, f.saravia@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
The post Facts & Figures 2024 appeared first on EBF.
]]>Brussels, 9 December 2024: As the European Parliament adopted its position and the Council reached its General Approach, the Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME), the European Association of Co-operative Banks (EACB), the European Banking Federation (EBF), the European Fund and Asset Management Association (EFAMA), the European Savings and Retail Banking Group (ESBG), and Insurance Europe call on the co-legislators to deliver on commitments to boost European competitiveness and to avoid concluding the Financial Data Access (FiDA) Regulation before a thorough assessment of its impact across the entire value chain is completed.
To safeguard and boost the competitiveness of the European financial sector, it is essential to ensure an approach that delivers tangible benefits to European citizens while at the same time ensuring that Europe’s financial industry can continue to innovate in a robust and cost-effective manner.
The success of the proposed FiDA framework calls for a more focused and evidence-based approach that delivers clear benefits to European citizens and companies. This necessitates further time for careful scrutiny of its broader and practical impact, both for consumers and industry. Without such an approach, FiDA will not only fall short of its ambition, but also undermine the protection of EU/EEA citizens and the competitiveness of the European financial industry alike.
The financial industry highlights the following recommendations to ensure an effective FiDA framework:
Following the ECON vote and the COREPER mandate for negotiations, and despite some positive improvements introduced in the EP and the Council positions, they remain very broad in scope, particularly in terms of data categories, and do not adequately address the competitiveness and data protection concerns mentioned above. The financial services industry has repeatedly raised these and other key concerns, also proposing relevant solutions, however they remain largely unaddressed.
The financial services industry stands ready to continue contributing to ensure that provides legal clarity and can effectively support the sound development of Open Finance in the EU/EEA.
Signing organisations:
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For more information please contact:
Alexandra Maniati
Senior Director, Innovation & Cybersecurity – a.maniati@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
The EBF produces a daily and a weekly newsletter with European banking news and updates from national banking associations across Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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Brussels, 17 September 2024 – The European Credit Sector Associations, composed of the European Association of Cooperative Banks (EACB), the European Banking Federation (EBF), the European Savings and Retail Banking Group (ESBG) welcome the publication by the Euro Retail Payments Board (ERPB) of its Working Group Report on fraud related to retail payments. On top of the three Associations, other key stakeholders from the private and public sector have actively contributed to the Report. It identifies four “gamechanger” actions that are necessary to strengthen the fraud prevention and mitigation across Europe, as well as a set of best practices identified to combat fraud.
Sanne van der Neut, co-Chair of the working group on behalf of the EACB, representing the supply side, highlights: “This report comes at an important point in time. Fraudsters are getting increasingly inventive and the fraud chain is becoming more complex. Fighting this needs a multistakeholder approach and one that goes beyond the payment sector.”
The report is the outcome of a collaborative effort that brings together the perspectives and unique insights from a wide range of parties affected by fraud, including representatives from consumer and merchant organisations, bank and non-bank payment service providers, central banks, the European Banking Authority, the European Commission, the European Data Protection Board, and Europol.
The four “gamechangers” identified for a more effective prevention and mitigation of fraud are:
1) Effective cross-sectoral collaboration beyond the payment industry and shared responsibilities;
2) The sharing of fraud insights and data;
3) A supervisory enforcement and cooperation at EU level across sectors beyond the payment industry;
4) Ensuring that product design prioritises consumer protection.
For each gamechanger, several actions are recommended that EU, national authorities, and the private sector can implement. It is especially noted that these recommendations can be particularly relevant to the work of the European Parliament and the Council, in the context of the ongoing negotiations on the proposal for a Regulation on payment services in the internal market (PSR) and beyond. The conclusions of this cross sectoral collaboration highlight that digital fraud and scams relate to a far broader and more complex matrix than the point of payment alone and should be regulated in a sufficiently comprehensive way outside the auspices of payments regulation.
The paper also includes a list of best practices, intended to serve as a collection of measures that public and private actors can draw upon when combating fraud.
The ERPB Working Group, launched in May 2023, was prompted by the rise of fraudulent activities accelerated by digitalization and social engineering. This initiative underscores the need for all actors in the fraud chain to collaborate more efficiently in preventing and combating fraud.
Read more about the gamechangers in the fight against fraud here.
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BRUSSELS, 12 February 2024 – This response complements the questionnaire response provided to the European Commission Multi-Stakeholder Expert Group of which the European Banking Federation is a member of. The introduction of the GDPR resulted in a significant increase in the attention for and the application of data protection rules.
The banking sector has a long tradition of compliance and affinity with customer data protection since even before the entry into force of the Directive 95/46/EC. This enduring commitment underscores the industry’s dedication to maintaining the highest standards of data security and privacy for its clients. The principle and risk-based approach of the Regulation remains one of its main benefits and should remain at the core of the GDPR. This is important for banks in light of the many sectoral regulations they have to abide by and for their ongoing digital transformation. However, challenges remain, and we would like to highlight the following general points:
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For more information please contact:
Liga Semane
Senior policy Adviser, Innovation & Data, l.semane@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
The post EBF response to the European Commission Call for Evidence on the Report on the General Data Protection Regulation (Art. 97) appeared first on EBF.
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BRUSSELS, 18 December 2023 – The European Banking Federation (EBF) held the fourth edition of the Data Protection Officers Forum (DPO Forum) on November 30, 2023, in Brussels. The event brought together over 45 DPOs from 18 countries across Europe, along with representatives from Data Protection Authorities (DPAs), the European Commission, and other institutions.
This year’s edition was organized in partnership with TRUST aWARE, a European Commission-funded project dedicated to providing a holistic and effective Digital Security & Privacy (S&P) framework. This framework includes a range of novel and integrated tools and services co-created by citizens and stakeholders to identify, audit, analyze, prevent, and mitigate the impact of various S&P threats associated with citizens’ digital activities. Notable developments from TRUST aWARE include a reporting capability designed to provide insights about security and privacy threats to DPOs, DPAs, and Cybersecurity Emergency Response Teams (CERTs).
The primary objectives of the annual EBF DPO Forum are to delve into practical challenges stemming from the application of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and to facilitate the exchange of best practices.
This year’s edition dived into several topics, including the role of DPOs in embedding Artificial Intelligence (AI) into banking processes and the potential and challenges of generative AI. Additionally, participants engaged in discussions about best practices on the right of access within the current regulatory framework, and in particular the interplay with sectoral requirements. Finally, DPOs also explored data protection aspects in different initiatives on the European digital finance agenda, including the Digital Euro, Payment Services Regulation (PSR), and the Financial Data Access Regulation (FIDA).
The fourth edition of the DPO Forum underscores the importance of collaborative efforts in navigating the evolving landscape of data protection and digital privacy. The exchange of knowledge and best practices facilitated by the EBF contributes to strengthening the role of DPOs in addressing emerging challenges and ensuring robust compliance.
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For more information please contact:
Liga Semane
Policy Adviser, Innovation & Data, l.semane@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
The post The EBF Annual Data Protection Officers Forum reaches its fourth Edition appeared first on EBF.
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BRUSSELS, 21 November 2023 – The European Banking Federation (EBF), together with the European Savings Banks Group (ESBG), the Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME), the European Payment Institutions Federation (EPIF), and Insurance Europe have co-signed a joint statement on the ongoing process of developing a cybersecurity certification scheme for cloud services (EUCS). While the industry welcomes the objective of establishing a minimum set of security and trust criteria for cloud services, the drafting of EUCS should be a purely technical process detailing the technical requirements for such certification.
ENISA’s current candidate scheme includes political and legal sovereignty elements, such as the requirement to have the company’s headquarters located in the EU, restrictions on ownership and governance restrictions. As things stand today, the inclusion of such requirements will be a step back and will ultimately undermine real competition in the European market, reduce choice for cloud customers and harm European industry and citizens.
Cloud adoption by financial services, which is steadily increasing, is key to improving agility, international competitiveness, resilience, client experience and cost efficiency, and even security. Depriving companies of a real choice of cloud providers will endanger their operational resilience and stifle digital innovation, while the lack of transparency in the process is also concerning.
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For more information please contact:
Dimos Karalis
Policy Adviser, Cybersecurity & Innovation, d.karalis@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent a significant majority of all banking assets in Europe, with 3,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – while employing approximately two million people. EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that reliably handle more than 400 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
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BRUSSELS, 28 June 2023 – The European Banking Federation (EBF) today shared its reaction to three major digital finance proposals put forward by the European Commission: a legal framework for a digital euro, the Financial Data Access framework and the Revision of EU rules on payment services.
“Today’s proposals touch upon central issues that will significantly affect the future of European financial services. It is crucial to ensure that the European Commission’s vision on digital finance helps enable a competitive ecosystem with a level playing field for all, unlocking new opportunities for users while upholding their safety in complex digital environments,” said EBF CEO, Wim Mijs.
He continued: “The proposal for the digital euro outlines the framework and the legal basis for the European Central Bank’s (ECB) plans for a retail Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC). It is an essential part of the thorough, democratic and public debate that is necessary for a project of this magnitude, with a potential widespread impact on society and the economy. Alongside the main features of a digital euro, it is important to discuss the broader questions about its added value, how it can best respond to current and future challenges of the European payments market, and how it can be developed jointly with the market.
At the same time, the proposed framework for financial data access needs to be carefully considered in terms of the data in scope, so as to make sure that it responds to actual user and market needs. There are steps in the right direction when it comes to ensuring fair competition between market participants with a fair distribution of value and risk.
Finally, the revision of EU rules on payment services should provide a stable basis for the future development of a successful open banking framework, and rules that enable the fight against the increasing online scams and fraud”.
A legal framework for a digital euro
Today’s proposal lays the ground for the issuance of a retail digital euro. The legislation should find a balance between defining the key characteristics of the digital euro with leaving enough room for the market to develop its distribution. Certainty and clarity on the modalities regarding the holding limits as well as compensation for intermediaries are also needed.
A retail digital euro could – if properly designed – support the strategic autonomy of Europe and ensure a monetary anchor role of the euro. However, to complement the European payments landscape, it must provide a clear added value and be future-proof by design.
It should be understood as a “raw material” that would be issued by the Eurosystem, allowing the industry to develop solutions and fully deploy its innovative potential to deliver competitive payment solutions to the European payments market through a true public-private partnership.
The design of a sustainable business model for the digital euro is vital. It is clear that the costs of building the infrastructure to enable the circulation of the digital euro, and its actual distribution cannot be borne by private actors alone. A harmonized framework of financial incentives should be set up where compensation mechanisms reflect the wider range of necessary actions to be taken by intermediaries.
In addition, to shield banks from the risk of deposit flight and to limit the negative impact on banks’ ability to finance the economy, it is important to set appropriate and firm limits in holdings and transactions.
Read the EBF’s vision on a digital euro ecosystem here.
The Financial Data Access framework
For data-driven innovation to unlock new opportunities for customers, it must be supported by a data-sharing ecosystem that ensures fair competition between market participants with a fair distribution of value and risk. The proposal presented today makes some steps in this direction, notably through including the possibility for financial incentives, but in other areas – such as the introduction of broad mandatory data access rights – the risks are not fully taken into account.
Data sharing should be based on customer and market needs. Introducing new, broad mandatory data access rights without careful cost-benefit analysis of each product or market, and without understanding where the real value for the customer lies, risks introducing further fragmentation in the financial sector when it comes to data sharing.
The possibility of cross-sectoral data sharing should be taken into account to leverage the potential that data from other sectors, with the customers’ permission, holds for developing new products, services and experiences in the financial sector.
We welcome that the proposal sets out key principles on how data could be shared, such as the compensation to make data accessible. Any compensation should reflect the wider range of necessary actions – collection, generation, structuring, preparing and sharing of data – not only the creation and maintenance of infrastructure.
The proposal also leaves room for market-driven initiatives to develop these principles further through data-sharing schemes, which can create a secure environment for data sharing with legal certainty for all actors. Yet feasible timelines are needed for the development of these initiatives.
The introduction of mandatory permission dashboards for customers needs to be carefully considered. Entities included in the scope require the flexibility to define and develop these services by using technologies that better fulfil specific needs.
Read EBF’s paper Open Finance: Towards a fit-for-market approach here.
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Revision of EU rules on payment services
The proposed upgrade of EU payments rules provides some welcome updates and clarifications but does not go far enough in making the essential changes necessary to create a truly successful open banking framework and enable the market to fight scams and fraud in an increasingly complex environment.
Payment Services Regulation and Payment Services Directive 3 will be fundamentally important in ensuring a legislative framework for payments that is in line with market evolution, and fosters an innovative and competitive EU payments market, that needs to be characterised by a level playing field between all providers of payment services.
Fair distribution of value and risk is key in creating an ‘open banking’ framework that corrects the imbalances resulting from the approach taken in PSD2. The principle of compensation should be included in payments legislation too, to ensure alignment with open finance. A key lesson learnt from the PSD2 implementation is that a competitive ecosystem only works when there are benefits for all. The EBF calls to ensure that the reviewed open banking framework provides a stable basis for the future development of a successful open banking framework that at the same time limits the changes needed for implementation.
Finally, prevention of fraud and scams is of utmost importance to banks, with significant initiatives already undertaken on this front. The issue is increasingly important in a context where methods continuously evolve, with new ways to exploit human vulnerabilities and mislead customers. The reviewed legislation should consider this topic broadly, as scams occur outside the payment transaction itself and it is extremely challenging for banks to detect them. Bringing all actors in the relevant areas and in the payments chain such as telecom operators, internet platforms, and parties that participate in the user authentication or payment initiation under adequate and proportionate legal obligations for fraud prevention, detection and mitigation is crucial. The EBF stands ready to participate in further joint efforts with the public sector to enhance consumer awareness, essential in combating authorised push payment scams and fraud.
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For more information please contact:
Rūta Barthet
Senior Media and Communications Officer, r.barthet@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent a significant majority of all banking assets in Europe, with 3,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – while employing approximately two million people. EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that reliably handle more than 400 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
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BRUSSELS, 6th March 2023 – Following the publication by the European Commission of the proposal for a Regulation on horizontal cybersecurity requirements for products with digital elements, i.e. the Cyber Resilience Act (CRA), the European Banking Federation (EBF) presents some key considerations of the European banking sector on the published text.
The EBF acknowledges that rules on digital products would contribute to achieving higher cybersecurity levels throughout the entire supply chain. Users of such products, both consumers and business -including banks- would benefit from minimum requirements that would apply to vendors of those products.
However, the EBF is of the view that the financial sector should be excluded from the scope of the CRA proposal, as the recently adopted DORA Regulation provides an extensive cybersecurity and digital operational resilience framework for banks which is equivalent -if not more detailed and comprehensive- to the one introduced by the CRA. It is therefore crucial that DORA should function as lex specialis to the CRA and this should be explicitly mentioned in the proposal’s text, in order to avoid confusion, duplications and overlaps in the rules and requirements on the EU level.
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For more information please contact:
Alexandra Maniati
Senior Director, Innovation & Cybersecurity, a.maniati@ebf.eu
Dimos Karalis
Policy Adviser – Cybersecurity & Innovation, d.karalis@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent a significant majority of all banking assets in Europe, with 3,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – while employing approximately two million people. EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that reliably handle more than 400 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
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BRUSSELS, 2nd August 2022 – The European Banking Federation (EBF) has responded to the European Commission’s Call for Evidence on an “Open Finance Framework – enabling data sharing and third party access in the financial sector.” Key points that the EBF highlights include:
The response to the Call for Evidence on Open Finance should be seen as a complement to the EBF response to the European Commission’s Targeted Questionnaire on Open Finance.
For more information please contact:
Alexandra Maniati
Senior Director of Innovation & Cybersecurity, a.maniati@ebf.eu
Liga Semane
Policy Adviser – Innovation & Data, l.semane@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent a significant majority of all banking assets in Europe, with 3,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – while employing approximately two million people. EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that reliably handle more than 400 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
The post EBF Response to the European Commission’s call for evidence on Open Finance appeared first on EBF.
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BRUSSELS, 20th July 2022 – The EBF has responded to the European Commission’s targeted consultation on Open Finance.
The data economy is of high interest to European banks in the context of their ongoing digital transformation and their aim to deliver new services and opportunities for customers. It is the combination of data from different sectors which holds the greatest potential, yet a cross-sectoral data sharing framework at EU level remains absent.
The EBF response notes that the focus for an Open Framework should be in addressing existing gaps in data sharing aspects, including consumer protection, technical obstacles, liability, and a fair distribution of value and incentives for all market actors. Data sharing should be voluntary, based on market needs, allowing to see for which use cases there is demand from customers and what would bring the most added value to them. Because it is the users – consumers and firms – who are the centre of data sharing.
This flexible approach would give space for innovation to emerge from the market itself while delivering new opportunities for customers, and enabling the financial sector to move towards an open data economy without deepening existing asymmetries from single-sector data sharing.
For more information please contact:
Alexandra Maniati
Senior Director, Innovation & Cybersecurity, a.maniati@ebf.eu
Liga Semane
Policy Adviser – Innovation & Data, l.semane@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent a significant majority of all banking assets in Europe, with 3,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – while employing approximately two million people. EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that reliably handle more than 400 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
The post EBF response to the European Commission’s targeted questionnaire on Open Finance appeared first on EBF.
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