EU parliament head challenges ECB over bad loan
guidelines
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[October 10, 2017]
By Silvia Aloisi
MILAN (Reuters) - The head of the European
parliament has challenged the European Central Bank over how new
guidelines for bank bad loans are being set, escalating a row between
Italy and the ECB over the proposed measures.
The ECB last week issued new proposals that will force banks from 2018
to set aside more cash against newly classified bad loans and said it
may also present additional measures to tackle the sector's huge stock
of bad debts.
Italy - whose banks hold nearly 30 percent of the bloc's 915 billion
euros ($1.08 trillion) in bad loans - has reacted angrily to the
proposals, asking the ECB to soften them following a public consultation
that runs until Dec. 8. Italian bank shares fell for a fifth straight
day on Tuesday following a string of analyst reports warning the
country's lenders would be hit by the new measures.
EU parliament speaker Antonio Tajani, an Italian national, said in a
letter to ECB President Mario Draghi, also Italian, that he was "deeply
concerned" about how the new policies were being set.
Tajani urged Draghi to involve the European parliament in the process to
avert an institutional clash.
"I seriously wonder whether specific additional obligations... can be
imposed on supervised entities without appropriately involving the
co-legislators in the decision-making process," Tajani said in the
letter, seen by Reuters and reprinted in the Italian press.
"I would urge you to take all steps in order to ensure that parliament's
prerogatives as co-legislator are duly respected, so as to avoid an
inter-institutional dispute about this issue."
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European Parliament President Antonio Tajani speaks at the EU summit
in Brussels, Belgium, June 22, 2017. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
The ECB declined to comment.
The letter is an unusual challenge to the ECB by a mainstream European
lawmaker such as Tajani, an ally of former prime minister Silvio
Berlusconi who was elected president of the European parliament in
January.
The European parliament does not have a role in banking supervision
decisions, although it can ask the ECB for information.
The ECB's banking supervisory functions are legally separated from
monetary policy and are carried out by the Single Supervisory Mechanism
(SSM), chaired by Daniele Nouy. Draghi, who like Nouy often appears
before the European Parliament, regularly invokes the separation
principle when asked about SSM matters.
Draghi tends to reply to letters from European lawmakers within days and
his responses are published by the ECB.
($1 = 0.8491 euros)
(Reporting by Silvia Aloisi Additional reporting by Francesco Canepa in
Frankfurt, Stefano Bernabei in Rome Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)
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