ECB Vice-President Luis De Guindos said last Monday that the 12
euro zone banks that were left with capital worth less than 9
percent of their risky assets in the latest health checks
"should increase robustness and enhance capital positions".
The prospect of higher capital demands put analysts on alert as
banking shares are already battered, the euro zone's economy is
slowing and financial markets are volatile.
But the ECB spokesperson said the test results would only be
used on a "case-by-case" basis by its banking watchdogs.
"The individual bank results of the stress test are taken into
account by microprudential supervision in its regular
supervisory process, so only case-by-case," the spokesperson
said in an emailed statement. "There is no automatism."
The case laid bare new differences between the Single
Supervisory Mechanism (SSM), which oversees banks, and the ECB's
department in charge of financial stability, now headed by De
Guindos.
Under his predecessor, Vitor Constancio, the two arms differed
on issues such as unpaid bank loans, the treatment of sovereign
debt and convertible bank bonds.
"As an institution with multiple functions, we also look at the
stress test from a macro-prudential perspective which considers
(the) financial stability of the whole industry," the
spokesperson added.
Germany's Deutsche Bank <DBKGn.DE> and France's Societe Generale
<SOGN.PA> and BNP Paribas <BNPP.PA> alone would have to raise 11
billion euros ($12.4 billion) between them if they were asked to
meet De Guindos' informal threshold, by Reuters' calculations.
De Guindos, who joined the ECB's board in June after leaving his
job as Spain's finance minister, is seen a candidate for
replacing Sabine Lautenschlaeger as vice chair of the SSM when
her term runs out early next year.
($1 = 0.8873 euros)
(Reporting By Francesco Canepa; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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