Wednesday, January 29, 2014

New EU rules seek to make mega-banks less risky









Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg, left, gestures while speaking with Greek Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras during a meeting of EU finance ministers at the EU Council building in Brussels on Tuesday, Wednesday. AP



BRUSSELS—The European Union’s executive arm is set to present a long-awaited financial market reform meant to defuse risk-taking by the largest banks and protect taxpayers from the potential costs of rescuing them.


Wednesday’s EU Commission proposal — echoing the United States’ so-called Volcker Rule — is a key part of the 28-nation bloc’s efforts to overhaul its financial system to avoid a repeat of the global crisis that forced governments to bail out banks in 2008 and 2009.


The draft regulation is expected to bar the continent’s largest banks — those whose collapse would threaten the stability of the financial system — from trading exclusively for their own profit, as opposed to a client’s. It will also aim at separating the banks’ riskier trading activities from their deposit-taking business.



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Tags: Banking , EU , European Union , Financial market



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