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ECB to Speed Up Approval of Banks' Capital Risk Model Changes

  • ECB lets banks implement model changes faster, fewer inspections
  • Capital benefits capped until on-site reviews completed

FRANKFURT, March 30 (Reuters) - The European Central Bank will simplify and ​speed up approvals for changes to banks' internal credit risk ‌models, easing a supervisory process that can delay capital benefits and trigger lengthy on-site inspections, it said on Monday.

Banks currently must seek the ECB's prior approval for ​any material change in their internal models, a requirement that can ​spur on-site investigations and force lenders to run their old ⁠and new models in parallel for extended periods.

Under new rules effective ​from October 1, banks will be allowed to implement material changes to ​their internal models shortly after submitting their application, and fewer of these changes will trigger an on-site review, the ECB said.

If a new model produces lower risk weights, ​banks will still get a quick go-ahead for their use, but ​any capital benefits will be capped until the ECB has assessed the model on-site.

"Under ‌the ⁠new approach, the ECB will conduct these on-site investigations of internal models primarily where higher risks warrant closer scrutiny," the ECB said in a statement.

"Material model changes will no longer automatically trigger an on-site investigation."

Separate guidelines ​from the European Banking ​Authority, also ⁠on Monday, reduce the number of model changes classified as material and subject to ECB approval.

The ECB, which ​supervises just over 100 of the euro zone's biggest ​banks, said ⁠that for sensitive cases, it retained the option to follow the standard approval process, under which banks must wait for the outcome of a dedicated ⁠on-site ​investigation before implementation.

The ECB last year conducted ​74 on-site investigations of internal models, 90% of which were triggered by banks requesting initial model ​approvals or material model changes.

Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Bernadette Baum

Source: Reuters


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