EU banks 'sufficiently capitalised': presidency
EU banks 'sufficiently capitalised': presidency
Published: 03:14 pm Oct 02, 2009
GOTHENBURG: Stress tests on 22 banks in the crisis-hit EU have shown the lenders are "sufficiently capitalised," the bloc's Swedish presidency said on Thursday.
"The credit losses have been calculated at 400 billion euros" for 2009 and 2010, said Swedish finance minister Anders Borg.
"Even in that adverse scenario, none of the banks would fall down on their tier one capital requirements," he said, adding that the results were "reassuring."
The dollar loss projections for the 22 European banks -- representing over 60 percent of all banking assets held within the EU -- amount to 580 billion.
European banks' stress test exposure has been the subject of transatlantic debate with different accounting methods obtaining different results.
"It was very harsh as regards the assumptions we used," insisted European Central Bank governor Jean-Claude Trichet of scenarios forecasting a decrease in European Union gross domestic product of 5.2 percent for 2009 and a 2.7 percent drop in 2010.
"When you compare the 400 billion euros we are mentioning as potential credit and trading losses... you have to understand that these are not baseline scenarios if you compare with other estimates.
"Even with this tough stress testing, we see that our system is resisting."
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said last month that International Monetary Fund figures have put potential write-downs for continental European banks at up to 1.1 trillion dollars.
European Economic and monetary affairs commissioner Joaquin Almunia said the estimates given to European Union finance ministers meeting in Sweden were "based on a different geographical dimension" from the IMF report, saying the latter "included banks established in countries not in the EU."
The results of the tests, conducted by the Committee of European Banking Supervisors, showed that capital ratios would be well above the minimum Basel Committee requirement of 4.0 percent -- hovering between 6.0 and 9.0 percent taking into account national weighting.
French finance minister Christine Lagarde said that the entire European financial system would show up in a "very strong" light.