Recommendation of the European Systemic Risk Board of 21 September 2011 on le... (32011Y1122(01))
Recommendation of the European Systemic Risk Board of 21 September 2011 on le... (32011Y1122(01))
RECOMMENDATION OF THE EUROPEAN SYSTEMIC RISK BOARD
of 21 September 2011
on lending in foreign currencies
(ESRB/2011/1)
SECTION 1
RECOMMENDATIONS
Recommendation A –
Risk awareness of borrowers
Recommendation B –
Creditworthiness of borrowers
Recommendation C –
Credit growth induced by foreign currency lending
Recommendation D –
Internal risk management
Recommendation E –
Capital requirements
Recommendation F –
Liquidity and funding
Recommendation G –
Reciprocity
SECTION 2
IMPLEMENTATION
1.
Interpretation
2.
Criteria for implementation
3.
Timeline for the follow-up
4.
Monitoring and assessment
ANNEX
ESRB RECOMMENDATIONS ON FOREIGN CURRENCY LENDING
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
I.
OVERVIEW OF FOREIGN CURRENCY LENDING IN THE UNION
I.1.
Foreign currency lending in the Union
Chart 1
Foreign currency lending to households and non-financial corporations in the Union
Chart 2
Foreign currency lending to non-monetary financial institutions private sector (excluding general government)
(4)
in the Union
Chart 3
Shares of foreign currency loans and foreign currency deposits in selected Member States
Chart 4
Share of foreign currency loans and loan-to-deposit ratios in selected Member States
I.2.
Drivers of foreign currency lending expansion
I.2.1.
Supply-side factors
I.2.1.1.
International versus domestic funding
Chart 5
Foreign currency loans and domestic currency loan-to-deposit ratios in selected Member States
I.2.1.2.
Growing presence of foreign groups in the CEE countries
Chart 6
Share of foreign-controlled subsidiaries and branches assets, in total banking sector (%)
I.2.1.3.
Competition pressures
I.2.2.
Demand-side factors
I.2.2.1.
Interest rate differentials
Interest rate differentials for loans to households in domestic currency and in euro
(p.p.)
Chart 7
Countries with pegs and fixed exchange rates
Chart 8
Countries with floating exchange rates
Chart 9
Interest rate differentials for loans in domestic currency and in Swiss francs in Hungary, Austria and Poland (in p.p.)
I.2.2.2.
Perception of exchange rate risk and euro-adoption expectations
II.
RISKS STEMMING FROM FOREIGN CURRENCY LENDING
II.1.
Credit risk influenced by exchange rate and foreign interest rate changes
II.2.
Funding and liquidity risks
II.3.
Excessive credit growth, risk mispricing and potential asset price bubbles
Chart 10
Share of foreign currency loans and credit-to-GDP ratio in selected Member States
Chart 11
Differences in share of foreign currency loans and in credit-to-GDP ratio in selected Member States
(p.p.)
Chart 12
Housing prices and credit growth in selected Member States (%)
II.4.
Concentration and spillover effects between home and host countries as risks to financial stability in the Union
Chart 13
Share of claims towards host countries’ banking systems by home countries (as of end 2010)
Chart 14
Share of banking claims towards host countries in the overall international banking claims
Chart 15
Banking claims towards host countries in the group of home countries with largest exposures at the end of 2010 (USD bn)
II.4.1.
Case-studies on cross-border spillovers: Austria and Sweden
BOX 1:
The Austrian experience from Austrian banks’ foreign currency lending in CEE countries and the Commonwealth of Independent States
BOX 2:
The Swedish experience from Swedish banks’ foreign currency lending in the Baltic States
II.5.
Higher volatility of capital adequacy ratios due to exchange rate changes
II.6.
Hindered monetary policy transmission channels
Chart 16
Foreign currency loans and exchange rate adjustment (Max. % change from 7/2008 until 6/2009)
Chart 17
Foreign currency loans and reserves losses (Min. % change from 7/2008 until 6/2009)
Chart 18
Foreign currency loans and interest rates (Max. bp change from 7/2008 until 6/2009)
Chart 19
Foreign currency loans and money supply (Min. % change from 7/2008 until 6/2009)
II.7.
Likelihood that, and conditions in which, risks may materialise
III.
POLICY ACTIONS AT THE NATIONAL LEVEL
III.1.
Policy measures adopted by different countries
|
Measures undertaken |
Countries (year)(32) |
|
Warnings on risks related to foreign currency loans |
Latvia (2007); Hungary (2004-2008); Austria (2001) |
|
Transparency/information requirements |
Latvia (2007 and 2011); Austria (2006); Poland (2006) |
|
Demand-side measures |
|
|
Eligibility criteria for borrowers: hedge or creditworthiness(33) |
Austria (2008 and 2010); Poland (2006) |
|
More stringent loan-to-value or DTI for foreign currency loans (than for loans in domestic currency)(33) |
Hungary (2010); Poland (2010 and 2012); Romania (2008) |
|
Supply-side measures |
|
|
Higher risk weights or capital requirements |
Latvia (2009); Hungary (2008)(34); Poland (2008 & 2012); Romania (2010)(35) |
|
Minimum standards for foreign currency and repayment vehicle-linked bullet loans addressing risk management systems of banks |
Austria (2003) |
|
Higher provisioning coefficients for unhedged borrowers |
Romania (2008) |
|
Limiting foreign currency loans to unhedged borrowers to 300 % of the credit institutions’ own funds |
Romania (2005-2007) |
|
Limits to open foreign currency positions or capital requirements for open foreign currency positions |
Latvia (1995); Lithuania (2007); Romania (2001) |
|
Differentiated minimum reserve requirements |
Romania (2004) |
|
All measures to limit rapid credit growth extended also to non-bank financial institutions. |
Romania (2006) |
|
Other |
|
|
Prohibition of foreign currency mortgage loans to unhedged borrowers(36) |
Hungary (2010) |
|
Contribution to avoidance of regulatory arbitrage, by home supervisors |
Italy (2007 and 2010); Austria (2010) |
|
Source: national central banks and national supervisory authorities. |
|