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						Citi and JPMorgan top list 
						of globally systemic banks 
						
		 
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		 [November 21, 2016] 
		By Huw Jones 
		 
		
		LONDON 
		(Reuters) - Citi has joined JPMorgan at the top of global regulators' 
		list of systemically important banks, replacing HSBC and meaning the 
		U.S. bank will have to hold extra capital from 2019 to help preserve 
		financial stability. 
		 
		The group of 20 economies (G20) agreed after the 2007-09 financial 
		crisis that top banks, whose size and complexity mean a collapse could 
		wreak havoc in markets, should hold extra capital, according to the 
		level of risk they present. 
		 
		Members of the list of 30 lenders will also have to begin holding bonds 
		from 2019 that can be written down to help replenish capital that is 
		burned through in a crisis. 
		 
		In the annual update of rankings published on Monday by the G20's 
		Financial Stability Board (FSB), Citi has replaced HSBC in the top 
		"bucket" facing a 2.5 percent capital surcharge on top of global minimum 
		requirements. 
		 
		No lender joined or dropped out of the top 30 list this year. 
		 
		Lenders on the list typically already meet or exceed the amount of 
		capital they must hold due to pressure from regulators and markets to 
		dispel any doubts about their resilience. 
						
		
		  
						
		HSBC joins BNP Paribas and Deutsche Bank in the next category down, with 
		a surcharge of 2 percent. Bank of America rose a category to join them. 
		 
		Barclays dropped a category to the 1.5 percent surcharge group. 
		Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and Wells Fargo rose a category 
		to join the UK bank. 
		 
		Morgan Stanley fell a category to the 1 percent surcharge group. 
		 
		The FSB is also due to agree a higher leverage ratio for the 30 lenders. 
		 
		The ratio, a broad measure of capital to non-risk-weighted assets, has 
		been set at a minimum of 3 percent for all other banks across the world. 
		 
		The FSB has yet to decide if the 30 should be subject to the same 
		leverage ratio "surcharge" or whether it too should adopt a "bucket" 
		approach. 
			
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			A man walks into the JP Morgan headquarters at Canary Wharf in 
			London May 11, 2012. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez/File Photo 
            
			  
		
		 
		The watchdog also updated its list of nine globally systemically 
		important insurers, which was unchanged from last year. 
			
		
		Insurers still on the list in 2017 will be required to comply with 
		tougher "loss absorbency" requirements from January 2019. 
		 
		The list comprises Aegon, Allianz, AIG, Aviva, Axa, MetLife, Ping An, 
		Prudential Financial, and Prudential. 
		 
		The FSB's latest list makes no mention of reinsurers, a category still 
		being considered for inclusion. 
		 
		Global insurance regulators have said they may take into account the 
		activities of insurers when they decide if they are globally systemic, 
		rather than just focusing on size and global reach. 
		 
		MetLife, the biggest U.S. life insurer, has also been designated as 
		systemically important by the Financial Stability Oversight Council, 
		made up of the heads of U.S. financial regulators. 
		 
		The company is fighting the U.S. designation in the country's courts. 
		 
		(Reporting by Huw Jones; Editing by Carolyn Cohn and Mark Potter) 
				 
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