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Leveraging the role of banks in the SIU ​

Day 1 Afternoon

Wednesday 25 March

Location :

ROOM 2

Speakers

Public Authoritiess
Barnabás Virag
Deputy Governor - The Central Bank of Hungary
Harald Waiglein
Director General for Economic Policy and Financial Markets - Federal Ministry of Finance, Austria
Jean Boissinot
Director, Research and Risk Analysis Directorate - Autorité de Contrôle Prudentiel et de Résolution (ACPR)
Michael Theurer
Member of the Executive Board - Deutsche Bundesbank
Peter Palus
Member of the EFC/EWG & Head of Financial Unit - Permanent Representation of the Slovak Republic to EU
Industry Representativess
Andrea Bowe
Managing Director, Head of Regulatory Strategy and Policy UK, Europe, and MEA - Citi
Francesco Ceccato
Chief Executive Officer - Barclays Europe
Giuseppina Marra
Head of Regulatory Affairs - Desjardins Group
Viviana Mitrache-Rimbault
Director of Public Affairs - Crédit Agricole S.A.

Objectives

Objectives

This session will examine whether EU banks are fully equipped to deliver the objectives of the Savings and Investment Union, notably by channelling European savings into productive investment through securitisation, market making, advisory services and support to SME and mid-cap access to capital markets. It will assess how far banks’ market intermediation capacity can help deepen European capital markets, strengthen cross-border risk-sharing and support the scaling-up of European firms.

The discussion will also address whether the current EU prudential and structural framework enables or constrains this role. In particular, it will explore the impact of capital, leverage and trading-related requirements, as well as ring-fencing and incomplete cross-border banking integration, on banks’ ability to provide liquidity and intermediate risk at EU level. The objective is to identify pragmatic and targeted priorities that could strengthen banks’ contribution to the SIU in the short to medium term, while preserving financial stability.

Points of discussion

  1. How can EU banks better leverage their market-related activities to effectively channel European savings into productive investment — contributing to deeper capital markets, better risk-sharing and stronger EU competitiveness?
  2. What regulatory and structural conditions are required for banks to fully play their role in the SIU? Can the objectives of the Savings and Investment Union — notably deeper and more integrated capital markets — be achieved without further progress in cross-border banking integration, including greater mobility of capital and liquidity within banking groups?