Bank bad loan woes require long-term solutions: France's
Le Maire
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[January 23, 2018]
By Francesco Guarascio
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Efforts to reduce the
bad loans held by European banks will take time, the French finance
minister said on Tuesday, warning against new measures to cut bad debt
faster that are backed by Germany and the European Central Bank.
Non-performing loans (NPLs) have been a burden for banks in the European
Union's southern countries since the 2008-09 global financial crisis, as
firms and households struggled to pay back their debt.
Cutting banks' holdings of NPLs is considered crucial to strengthen
economic growth in Europe and to complete a banking union, the bloc's
flagship project to shield itself against future financial crises.
But the EU countries are divided over the pace at which the nearly 1
trillion euros ($1.2 trillion) of NPLs should be cut. Germany and the
ECB are calling for faster cuts while Italy, which last year
significantly cut its high exposure, urges a more gradual approach to
avoid fire sales of bank assets.
"We have to continue at the same pace," France's Bruno Le Maire said on
arriving to a meeting of EU finance ministers in Brussels that will
discuss bad loans.
Last week, the European Commission said NPLs are going down in the 28
countries of the EU but remain high [nL8N1PD2YM].
The ECB supervisory arm, chaired by French regulator Daniele Nouy, has
called for higher provisioning against bad loans, a move that would
force banks to offload their dud loans faster but could create large
holes in the balance sheets of the most exposed lenders.
Germany has supported a faster reduction of NPLs because this would
lower risks in Europe's banks and could pave the way for EU reforms
meant to use common resources to protect bank depositors.
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French Finance Minister
Bruno Le Maire arrives for a news conference after a meeting about
Lactalis baby milk contamination scandal at the Bercy Finance
Ministry in Paris, France, January 12, 2018. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
Last week, Le Maire said that France was prepared to address Germany's concerns
and in particular the way that non-performing loans are handled in a bid to make
progress on the banking union [nL8N1PD55I].
But on Tuesday, he seemed to take a line closer to the Italian view. He praised
efforts made by the Italian government in cutting bad loans and stressed that
solutions of the problem were for the "long-term".
"We have to continue our efforts. They are long-term efforts. It's difficult. It
takes time and it requires choices that are not always easy," Le Maire told
reporters.
The Commission will make new legislative proposals in March to facilitate
shedding bad loans and avoid a new build-up. The ECB is considering stricter
requirements, which could have an impact on the stock of NPLs.
"We sometimes tend to forget what has been already done and to propose new
things without noticing that part of the route has been already done," Le Maire
said when asked whether clear targets were needed to cut existing bad loans.
($1 = 0.8173 euros)
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; editing by Philip Blenkinsop, Larry King)
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