Intervention by Wim Mijs, Chief Executive Officer of the European Banking Federation, at the European Compliance Conference in Warsaw, 20 April 2018
Good morning ladies and gentlemen,
Wim Mijs, European Banking Federation CEO
Not so long ago, a group of criminals decided to rob a bank. They figured that plotting an assault on an actual branch would be too risky. So instead they planned a virtual attack. A fake email was sent to targeted bank employees attached with a malware file that provided access to the internal networks of banks. The Carbanak malware was designed in such a way that it could infect the servers that controlled ATMs, after this successful penetration the hackers could do their work and program the ATMs to dispense cash on a chosen moment of the day. The only thing that the gang had to do, was to be on time to pick up the cash. Their time management proved to be excellent and the gang managed to steal $1 billion across 40 countries hitting more than 100 financial institutions. A pretty nifty scheme if I may say so.
This may sound like a movie script from Ocean’s 11 but it turned out to to be real for all of us. Together with Europol and international police forces, the EBF helped operationally to track the money, which was laundered with money mules and cryptocurrencies. Eventually contributed to the arrest of the mastermind behind the heist. His name was Denis K., a 34-year old computer engineer with a Ukrainian passport, living on the Spanish Costa.
For us as EBF this arrest was a major new development. We were looking at our first operational result of after our partnership with Europol, and we achieved this by sharing the right information between different authorities, across different jurisdictions.
Why am I telling you this? This is the story of your security office. Of your IT department. Of all of your staff using computers. And that is everybody in your organisation. It is today’s reality for both you and me. It’s another reminder of the risks that our industry is facing. Let’s not forget this this just happened by opening the wrong email. But it also shows that incidents can be prevent and dealt with.
Wim Mijs, European Banking Federation CEO
New developments in regulation and technology are keeping us busy. While new risks are emerging, the work of compliance departments is getting essential for business continuity. You are an important part of the line of defence. The front office comes first. But you help maintain a delicate balance. You make the rules work. A tiny mistake can have unexpected consequences.
That was also clear more than ten years, ago when the global financial crisis hit. We all remember the stressful days we had to endure. The European financial sector was dealing with significant liquidity problems, followed by insolvency and even reaching the heights of systemic risk.
I’m pleased to say that our banking sector has clearly recovered. The numbers continue to confirm this. Even though you are not risk managers, you might want to know that we have a core equity capital ratio of 13,8% in Europe, with a leverage ratio of 5%.
Now that the crisis is behind us, the real work can continue and intensify.
In the years before crisis hit there was little interest in making more rules. The appetite for financial regulation was almost non-existent, But after the crisis the scale turned the other way, and regulators produced a tsunami of new rules.
Post-crisis rules and procedures have come into force and have influenced the way we work. You have been here at the European Compliance Conference for two days now and you probably discussed the impact of almost all of this.
Luckily – at least for us as lobbyists, to put it ironically – financial regulation is never finished and policy makers in Europe have not stopped working to keep up with a transforming industry. There is a lot more coming your way and that will continue to keep us busy.
We see that maintaining financial stability still is a core objective of upcoming legislation. But many recent proposals also show a growing desire to improve efficiency, competitiveness and to reorder the market.
Together with the fast expanding digital transformation, this policy mindset decides how our jobs and our banks will look like in the future.
Let’s take a look at the current EU ambitions on financial regulation and the role of regulators, some plans that require, in my perspective, extra attention from the industry.
A main EU priority in financial regulation is the completion of an integrated Financial Union, consisting of the Banking Union and the Capital Markets Union. These are very different animals.
Capital Markets Union is a way to stimulate more integrated financial markets. Banking Union is about addressing omissions.
The Banking Union is deemed to function as a supporting foundation necessary for an single currency union. It has the four pillars:
On Capital Markets Union: the European Commission has not delivered. Brexit led to the departure of my good friend Commissioner Jonathan Hill, and that effectively meant the end of CMU in the Juncker Commission. CMU was supposed to facilitate further integration of the EU capital markets. We now wait to see what will happen after the 2019 elections for the European Parliament.
What’s left for now in terms of coming financial regulation is the Risk Reduction Package, which is currently considered by the EU Parliament. It’s also known as CRR2 and CRD5. Despite thousands of amendments that have been tabled on the original Commission proposal, we see many elements that are still unclear and that need even more revisions.
The current review of Risk Reduction Measures presents an opportunity, at least on paper, to introduce a more calibrated approach of banking rules, an approach that supports business activities, not burden them.
But as you know well such a review of existing regulation does not necessarily mean more clarity and more certainty. Any of you will recognize that this is something that happened with the MIFID package, the most pressing area that is widely discussed by many compliance departments.
MIFID was initially designed as a small tweak to Art. 11 of the ISD.
And then, in 2011, came MIFID 2;
What really is the objective? Was it to improve Mifid 1? Or was it because the Brussels sausage factory had to keep on turning?
Mifid 1 was seven years in the making. 30.000 pages. 1.4 million paragraphs. if you stack them up it’s well above your knees.
Some banks spending more than 40 million euros each on compliance; total costs of 2.5 billion euro in compliance. That’s a rather expensive sausage.
Mifid 2 was designed as radical shake-up. We saw it both as an opportunity to create more transparency, but also as a threat. It certainly means a step-change for fund managers, and for banks.
As European Banking Federation of course welcomed the review of Mifid 1 that was announced in 2011. Did we really have a choice?
The discussions took place at an incredible level of details. We could have continued these discussions for many more years, but the Commission in the end wanted no further delays.
If there is one thing the commission can be praised for it is that Commissioner Dombrovskis was keen to create certainty. As long as the discussion were on-going no one really knew how the final package was going to look like. The Commission rushed the Mifid 2 Package. That is clear to everybody involved.
Generally speaking, as EBF, we often ask the Commission and the EU to provide regulatory certainty. But Mifid 2 was a clear example of how not to do it.
We really do need more regulatory certainty for the European banking sector. Rules need to be there early and we need time to implement them properly.
We need to avoid problems as we have seen with MIFID II. Not only to make compliance workable. But also to let the single market function properly, in an integrated way. As EBF we fully support the creation of a true single market for financial services. With Banking Union and Mifid 2 are moving in that direction, albeit slowly.
What is decided in Brussels, and increasingly in Frankfurt, has clearly changed the day-to-day compliance work in our industry. It has changed the role for all of you and your organisations. You all are transforming and adapting to new ways of working.
Modern compliance means dealing with this wide variety of new procedures and requirements. It means dealing with diverse regulating entities. And all that in an environment heavily influenced by digitalisation.
Working with supervisors now means welcoming joint supervisory teams consisting of different cultural backgrounds, sometimes the procedures are familiar, even overlapping with local rules, but sometimes this European dimension brings surprises to your work, surprises in language, etiquette, unexpected demands that require extra resources.
On a more operational level, compliance has to adapt to different organisational structures, interaction between front and back offices is being pressured. Compliance departments need to proactively advocate towards the front office, more than in the past.
Not only internal work is affected, also the external actors can feel the change. They are often getting lost in the patchwork of procedures. Improved communication is key.
Clients, partners and consumers will all need more guidance with all these new rules. Compliance professionals should get used to not only enforce the rules but also explain them.
Let me address a number of specific developments, which we are also addressing as European Banking Federation:
Cloud computing is providing a safe solution for the storage of data and the outsourcing of computer power. We welcome this. But banks and cloud service providers need a clear set of rules that support secure cloud adoption in finance.
Artificial Intelligence is leading to automated solutions such as robo-advice and smart algorithms that get more out of data. These tools certainly are making AML and KYC protocols more efficient. They play a key role in reducing fraudulent activity.
Let me close:
Risks are more diverse than ever. Cybercrime, with examples such as the Carbanak case, is just one of them. Fraud is getting more sophisticated. I just mention CEO fraud.
Derisking becomes a more difficult exercise, as we have seen in Latvia.
Geopolitical uncertainty brings even more spice to the table. Just think about the tense connections with Iran and the case of fraud in Latvia.
Being ‘from compliance’ is a tough job. More rules mean more work. Last week it was revealed that on a global scale financial regulation costs 780 billion dollars per year. (BIAC-OECD number)
Regulatory inconsistencies across different jurisdictions cost financial institutions between 5 to 10% of their annual revenues. You can easily Imagine the material impact and in-proportionate burden on smaller banks, with relatively small compliance departments.
Regulation will always need an extra pair of eyes, that is why I am very glad to be invited here. Together we can find the right balance, making improvements where necessary. We need your input, and that is also the role of the EBF, to take your concerns and address them with the right institutions.
Compliance is about directing the lines of defence. This has become absolutely critical amid the growing complexity of financial organisations, especially in a fast-moving digital economy. But remember: like in the cybercrime case, if a criminal can use the benefits of a transforming society to do his job well, then so can you.
Thank you for your attention.
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]]>INTRODUCTORY REMARKS BY WIM MIJS, CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF THE EBF
Wednesday 7 March 2018, at the European Banking Institute seminar on proportionality, hosted by the Single Resolution Board in Brussels.
Ladies and gentlemen,
Europe’s banking sector is amazingly diverse. Let’s take a look at two specific aspects:
We all know that the banking landscape in Europe is home to more than 6.000 banks. Large and small, commercial, retail and cooperative, public and private. For cultural and historic reasons, this is how banking in Europe looks.
When we take a closer look at the European banking map we see significant differences. Some of the largest of banks hold total assets of more than 1 trillion Euro on their balance sheet. We also see many smaller banks with assets of less than 1 billion Euro. That still is significant, but it means some of the biggest banks are more than 1000 times bigger than the smallest ones.
Secondly: the banking map also shows that the one hundred biggest banks in the Eurozone – the ones that are directly supervised at the European level by the ECB in the SSM Supervisory Mechanism – account for approximately 80% of the total assets held by the European banking sector.
These dimensions cannot be ignored when considering a proportional application of regulation and supervision in the European banking sector as whole.
If all of the 6.000 banks in Europe are to be made subject to the same kind of stringent regulation and supervision – then financing for many businesses and households may be put at risk. The burden for smaller banks is significant already. The ultimate costs would be in financial instability and in lower economic growth. After all, Europe has a bank-financed economy.
A smart and coherent approach to proportionality is required to find a balance that makes all banks in Europe – large and small, cooperative, savings and commercial, private and public – part of the same regulatory and supervisory framework. A proportional approach maintains diversity and ensures a more resilient and future-proof banking system.
My question here is: do we currently have such a smart and coherent approach? Does the current approach foster the diversity we want to maintain?
Legislators and regulators had proportionality on their mind when designing laws and rules. But are these sufficiently transposed in practice?
That is the question of today and beyond.
Regulators and supervisors also acknowledge this challenge. Today’s regulation takes account of proportionality to some degree. Tiered standards exist, demanding more frequent and comprehensive reporting standards of large institutions. The EBA guidelines on the SREP have embedded proportionality. My friend and Bundesbank Board Member Andreas Dombret regularly encounters situations where the gradations are inadequate. As he says, the principle of proportionality as such is nothing new. It is just that this still has not been anchored deeply enough.
I am delighted to see that the European Banking Institute as an academic body has been studying this question for some time already. Your important academic reflections are what the EU leaders and supervisors need to think about and consider.
Your work already has highlighted the challenges for the ECB, who has to cope with major inefficiencies because of a plethora of national rules as well as a wide range of options and discretions. I would like to recall one particular EBI paper calling for a new single text, ‘The European Banking Act’ … that could include a ‘CRR Light’ regime for small and medium-sized banks.
And already I look forward to June 2018, when Professor Bart Joosen will use his inaugural lecture in Amsterdam on this very topic of proportionality.
Academic observations are truly valuable in our discussion on proportionality. I sincerely hope the academic arguments will also support and improve the understanding at the EU level. Your academic input is essential for finding proper answers to the many questions that we have.
One key issue for instance is where to set the numerical thresholds. In the Peter Simon report the European Parliament is discussing the creation of three different categories of banks. The parliament is considering a threshold of somewhere between 1.5 billion and 5 billion Euro in assets to define for the smallest banks.
If we look at the SSM regulation, the borderline for direct supervision of an institution is set at 30 billion Euro in assets. This threshold approach thus leaves a grey area for banks that hold assets worth between 5 and 30 billion Euro. Some of these banks will already be subject to direct SSM supervision because of their national systemic risk, or simply because they are among the three largest financial institutions in their country.
Shouldn’t these not-so-small-but-not-very-big banks also benefit from proportionality? How do we properly define these levels? Which criteria do we apply?
And to continue to the questioning: might there be an alternative to these thresholds that lawmakers are currently considering? One option could be to link the implementation of the financial regulatory framework to the risk-profile of an institution, considering for example interconnectedness and leverage. What would be the pros and cons of both approaches?
And then there also is the level playing field to consider. Do we run the risk that a ‘one size fits all’ approach leads to a unlevel playing field? Can this distort competitiveness? Can it distort the needed diversification?
So as you see, I have many questions. Questions that need to be the subject of substantial academic research. We need your insights, your academic input. Your PHDs.
From our own conversations with managers of large banks, we hear that they struggle to comply with the current legislation due to the sheer complexity and sophistication of the regulation. If this is true for banks with significant resources, how does this scenario look like for smaller banks?
The point of view of the smaller banks, which are also represented by the European Banking Federation, it is clear: if there is no change the smaller banks will be pushed out of the market. For them, the current approach is clearly disproportionate. The reporting burden has become unbearable.
Let me conclude.
The road towards a broadly accepted proportionality regime is a delicate balancing act that may require several years to achieve. As you know I am an optimist. This time around, in the Risk Reduction package, we are putting in place the stepping stones towards a good and robust solution.
The current review of CRR2 and CRD5 presents an opportunity for introducing a more proportionate application of regulation for banks. Yes, proportionality should not lead to supervisory laxity or deviations from the single rule book. We do not want a salon-de-massage for smaller banks. But to make a real difference, the current proposal needs improvement.
Better definitions for proportionality in the current review for the CRR2 and CRD5 clearly are a welcome next step, one that should alleviate the regulatory pressure in particular for the smaller and less complex banks in Europe in the near future.
But the discussion will continue, also after the Banking reform package has been updated. The academic notion of a ‘European Banking Act’ is worthy of further reflection. The questions I raised here will need answers, from a European perspective.
And I know that I can count on you, with your academic powers and insights, to find answers to all these questions, from a European perspective. Thank you for your attention.
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Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The post Are we really proportionate? EBF CEO Wim Mijs addresses proportionality appeared first on EBF.
]]>The European Banking Institute (EBI) is a research hub resulting from the joint venture of 27 highly regarded European academic institutions. These institutions aim to provide the highest quality legal and economic studies in the fields of banking regulation and supervision in Europe, and to fuel the dialogue between regulators, supervisors and industry representatives.
This research-based workshop, co-organised by the European Banking Federation (EBF) and the European Savings and Retail Banking Group (ESBG), will gather academics, regulators, supervisors and representatives of the industry to exchange views on the topic of proportionality, which has gained momentum at EU level and is, in particular, relevant for ongoing legislative debates on banking package reforms of CRR and CRD IV as part of the Risk Reduction Measures.
Wednesday 7 March from 10:00 – 15:30
(doors open at 9:30)
Single Resolution Board ‘s premises,
Treurenberg 22, 1049 Brussels
Sarah Schmidtke
Tel: +32 2 508 37 19
09:30: Registration
10.00: Welcome by Thomas Gstaedtner, President of the Supervisory Board,
European Banking Institute
10.10: Keynote speech by Elke Koenig, Chair, Single Resolution Board
10.30: Introductory remarks by Wim Mijs, CEO, European Banking Federation
Followed by Chris de Noose, Managing Director, European Savings and Retail Banking Group
10.45: Session 1 – Reflections around the concept of proportionality
Academic Presentation:
• Christos Hadjiemmanuil, member of the EBI Academic Board, University of Piraeus
Discussants:
• Fernando Restoy, Chair, Financial Stability Institute
• Markus Ferber, MEP, Vice Chair, Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs
• Gerhard Huemer, Director of Economic Policy, UEAPME
• Astrid Engel Thomas, Head of Legal Department, LOPI (Danish local and savings banks’ association)
12:00: Coffee break
12.20: Session 2 – The principle of proportionality in regulation
Academic Presentation:
• Marco Lamandini, Vice-President of the EBI Academic Board, University of Bologna
Discussants:
• Martin Merlin, Director of regulation and prudential supervision of financial institutions, DG FISMA, European Commission
• Peter Simon, MEP, Vice Chair, Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs
• Christian Ossig, Chief Executive, Association of German Banks
13.30: Networking lunch
14.15: Session 3 – The principle of proportionality in supervision
Academic Presentation:
• Bart Joosen, President of the EBI Academic Board, VU University Amsterdam
Discussants:
• Thomas Gstaedtner, Head of Division, Directorate General Micro-Prudential Supervision II, ECB
• Isabelle Vaillant, Director of regulation, European Banking Authority • Angelique van Gerner, Head of Enterprise Risk, Triodos Bank N.V
15.30: Closing remarks by Enrico Leone, Chancellor, European Banking Institute
The post EBI event 7 March: Fostering a diversified banking market through proportionality: An academic review appeared first on EBF.
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