Commerzbank
set to pass ECB bank stress test: sources
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[October 13, 2014]
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Preliminary
discussions between Germany's Commerzbank and the European Central Bank
have given the German lender no reason to believe its capital will fall
below the minimum levels required in the euro zone's landmark bank
tests, two sources familiar with the talks told Reuters.
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The ECB is carrying out a series of "supervisory dialogues" with the
130 banks in the tests to give them early warning of how they have
fared so that they can plan any capital raising actions needed. The
ECB has stressed that the information is "partial and preliminary".
Sources familiar with the Commerzbank talks, which took place last
week, said the ECB had not given any signal that would indicate that
the bank would fall short of the minimum requirements.
"After the supervisory dialogue (with the ECB) there are no
indications that the bank may have failed," said one of the sources
on conditions of anonymity because the deliberations are private. A
second source confirmed the dialogue result.
Some analysts have pointed to Commerzbank as one of the few banks
that may fall short of the ECB's stringent capital requirements.
Commerzbank Chief Executive Martin Blessing has stressed repeatedly
in the past that he believed the bank to be well-positioned to pass
the test, which the ECB is carrying out before becoming Europe's
banking supervisor from November 4.
An ECB spokeswoman said: "We cannot comment on individual
institutions. Any inferences drawn as to the final outcome of the
exercise would be highly speculative as the results are still in
preparation."
The ECB is currently reviewing how 130 of the euro zone's largest
banks value their assets and is testing whether their capital is
strong enough to allow them to weather future crises. The results
will be published on October 26.
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Banks that only marginally exceed the 5.5 percent Core Tier 1 ratio
required by the ECB could be forced to take steps to boost their
capital all the same, through measures like curbing dividends.
These measures would be less disruptive for shareholders than the
remedies for banks that dip below the thresholds and are forced to
take more radical steps like raising additional equity or converting
contingent debt instruments into shares.
Commerzbank declined to comment.
(Reporting by Jonathan Gould, Alexander Hübner and Eva Taylor;
writing by Arno Schuetze; Editing by Georgina Prodhan)
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