European Cross-Border Banking and Banking Supervision
DALVINDER SINGH
Disponibilité: En rupture de stock - disponible sous 10 jours
- Catégories: April 2020, Affaires économiques et monétaires, Droit bancaire et financier
- Editeur: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780198844754
- Reliure: Paperback
- Nombre de pages: 320
Résumé
This new work provides timely analysis of the cross-border exercise of 
banking activity in the EU and its supervision, from the perspective of 
the 'home-host rule'. It examines the current system and the efficacy of
 recent reforms considering whether the centralisation of decision 
making and a more effective mutualisation of financing tools could 
improve the safety and soundness of the EU banking system and reduce the
 asymmetry of information between home and host authorities.
 
 
The EU banking market is very integrated since banking institutions 
based in the Union are free to perform their activities within the 
single market. This has allowed EU banking institutions to significantly
 increase their cross border operations. This way of working is based on
 the home country control principle according to which EU institutions 
performing cross border activities continue to be supervised by their 
home country supervisor. However, this system has raised challenges for 
effectively performing supervision, resolution and crisis management of 
banking groups operating across the borders of many different 
jurisdictions.
 
 This book analyses how far recent reforms under 
the banking union regime have addressed these issues to ensure the 
integrity and stability of the European integration project. It utilises
 data to illustrate the cross border exposures between member states and
 how they influence home and host decision making. But it equally 
explores those areas that still remain within the national discretion 
such as non-performing loans, insolvency-liquidation of banks and 
deposit protection arrangements, to mention a few.
 
 The book 
analyses the main pillars of the banking union: the single supervisory 
mechanism (SSM); and the Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM) and the 
proposed European Deposit Insurance Scheme (EDIS); and the related tools
 designed to provide crisis management under the European Stability 
Mechanism (ESM). As such the work considers the impact of the Single 
Rulebook. In considering these pieces of regulation and mechanisms the 
book analyses how international standards and EU requirements undertake 
to divide responsibilities between the home and host state and the 
extent to which they align interests between the home and host and 
minimise potential conflicts of interests. In this analysis examples 
from a set of EU cross-border banks are used to illustrate the workings 
of home and host relationship between Member States and Third Countries,
 and the benefits of participating in centralisation of decision making 
and mutualisation of financing in resolution and depositor protection.
 
 This work provides a valuable resource for academics researching on 
central banking union and regulation, and helps legal practitioners to 
address questions of supervision, resolution and insolvency with a 
cross-border element.
Table des matières
Table of Cases
Table of Legislation
Introduction
1: European Cross-Border Banking
2: The ECB's Supervision and SRB Resolution- Participating and Non-Participating Member States
3: The EU Home and Host-Home Dilemma: The Prudential Supervisory Perspective
4: Regulation and Supervision of Non-Performing Loans and Loan Loss Provisioning
5: The EU Home and Host Dilemma: The Resolution Perspective
6: European Bank Insolvency and Liquidation Proceedings
7: The EU Mechanisms of Financial Crisis Management and Containment: Decentralized and Centralized Approaches
Index