Economic news

Euro Zone's Integration Fails to Reach Stock Markets, ECB

FRANKFURT, May 7 (Reuters) - Euro zone financial integration has made steady progress in the past few years but the region's equity markets remain ​stubbornly fragmented, lagging behind advances in debt and banking, ‌the European Central Bank said in a report on Thursday.

The ECB and the European Commission are pushing to deepen integration and build a single ​market, starting with financial services, hoping it will channel more ​savings into investment and ultimately lift growth.

Indicators of financial ⁠inter-connectedness, such as cross-border lending, bond holdings and market spreads, ​have risen above long-term averages since 2022, supported by upbeat sentiment, ​the ECB said in a biennial report.

Broad improvements spanned across bonds, banking and some capital market segments, the report showed. Equity market integration, however, has ​deteriorated over the same period, with cross-border investment within the ​bloc falling to historically low levels.

"Empirical evidence points to a set of interrelated ‌structural ⁠blockages that continue to limit the effectiveness of European capital markets in supporting innovation and long-term growth," the ECB said in the report.

Barriers, such as fragmented supervision, tax systems and market infrastructure, ​continue to deter ​cross-border investment, the ⁠ECB said.

The report highlights that euro area households keep a large share of their savings in ​bank deposits, with relatively small exposure to equities, ​further reducing ⁠the pool of risk capital available to companies.

The ECB backed Commission proposals – from tax simplification to pension reforms and stronger EU-level oversight – ⁠as ​steps in the right direction.

But it signalled ​that more decisive action will be needed to overcome entrenched national barriers, such as ​national corporate and securities laws.

Reporting by Francesco Canepa Editing by Tomasz Janowski

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree