Josef Bergt
2023
Introduction
The landscape of banking law, particularly within the context of Regulation EU) No 575/2013 on prudential requirements for credit institutions and investment firms or the Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR) has witnessed significant evolution over the years, shaping the way deposit transactions are viewed and regulated. This article aims to dissect the intricate details of deposit business pursuant to the CRR.
The Essence of Deposit Business
The deposit business, encompasses two primary activities:
While the second variation serves as a catch-all provision, since its introduction, the first variation has largely lost its independent significance. Both alternatives share the common feature of “acceptance of funds”. Both also only include funds categorized as “unconditionally repayable funds of the public.”
Definition of Funds
Funds, in the context of this provision, refer to any legal tender. This includes sight deposits at licensed credit institutions, both domestic and foreign, equivalent to cash. Privately created payment instruments are not considered funds unless exchangeable for legal tender or equivalent book money.
Acceptance of Funds
Acceptance involves the physical receipt of cash and, in the case of book money, crediting to an account as part of cashless transactions. According to the provision's spirit, funds created through credit creation or transfer are also considered accepted funds. This includes conversion of a trade claim into a loan or allowing funds to remain deposited. Bank-technically, these processes are equivalent; such funds are subject to the same rules as other funds and are considered part of deposit business regardless of interest payment.
The Public
The term “public” defines the source of funds relevant to the deposit business. For effective investor protection, all third-party funds are intended to be covered. This includes funds from a clearly defined subset of the public. The term encompasses both natural and legal persons, including employees, friends, association members, and non-personally liable partners. However, personally liable partners actively involved in company management are excluded under certain conditions.
Exclusions and Special Cases
Funds from connected companies, personal partners not involved in management, or funds under the jurisdiction of recognized corporate investment companies are not considered public funds. Also, funds from licensed credit institutions, including those operating under the European Passport do not constitute deposit business.
Repayable Funds
Accepted funds have to be unconditionally repayable. Capital contributed by a shareholder to a corporation against the issuance of shares or for a business share is not considered "repayablefrom the company's perspective and does not fall under the deposit business. This also applies to most contracts dealing on an exchange of services or goods on a quid pro quo basis.
The classification of funds as unconditionally repayable takes into account the banking industry norms, the conditions offered to the customer, the actual nature of the fund transfer, and the financial institution's promotional activities. An unconditional repayment claim exists without any conditions that could suspend the claim and should be independent of the financial institution’s business success.
Specific case scenarios, such as mezzanine financing (hybrid forms of corporate financing that display characteristics of both equity and debt capital), including convertible loans, subordinated loans and profit-participating loans, may in individual cases be regarded as unconditionally repayable funds within the meaning of the deposit business.
Exception for Bearer and Order Debt Securities
The deposit business definition does not apply when the repayment claim is documented in bearer or order debt securities. This exception was created to facilitate direct financing to industrial companies in the capital market without needing intermediation by licensed banks.
Only instruments that are equivalent to bearer or order debt securities, regardless of the issuer's location, qualify for this exemption. Individually issued securities that are not interchangeable with others of the same kind do not fall under this exception.
The requirement is that the rights from the securities must follow the principles of general securities law, meaning the right from or contained and represented in the paper must follow the right to the paper, transferable according to property law principles or endorsement.
Security Provision Excluding the Deposit Business
Certain securities or collateral can exclude the operation from being classified as a deposit business, provided they allow direct satisfaction of the investor's claim without third-party legal transactions. Funds that are transferred as security respectively collateral are not considered deposits.
Licensing Requirement for Operating a Deposit Business
Licensing as a credit institution is required for anyone who wants to conduct banking transactions or financial services, including deposit business, on a commercial basis or to an extent requiring a commercially organized business operation.
The operation is considered commercial if it is intended to last for a certain duration and is aimed at making a profit, regardless of whether the business's scope objectively requires a commercially organized operation.
Capital Requirements for Banks (Own Funds Ratios and Composition of Eligible Capital)
In summary, the total capital requirements of Pillar 1 amount to 8% of the capital. In addition, the capital conservation buffer and systemic risk buffer of 2.5% each must be considered. Furthermore, Pillar 2 requirements to cover additional risks must be taken into account.
Besides the capital requirements, the requirements for own funds must also be met (i.e., solvency and liquidity are equally important).
From Pillar 1, particularly the LCR (Liquidity Coverage Ratio) and the Net Stable Funding Ratio (which focuses on so-called HQLA – high-quality liquid assets) must be maintained.
From Pillar 2, in broad terms, the ILAAP (Internal Liquidity Adequacy Assessment Process), ICAAP (Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process), and SREP (Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process) must be complied with.
Pillar 3 also entails additional reporting obligations for compliance with key figures (ALMM; Additional Liquidity Monitoring Metrics).
The initial capital of a credit institution pursuant to CRD IV (Directive 2013/36/EU; Capital Requirements Directive) has to be at least EUR 5 million (Art 12 CRD IV) and for Liechtenstein has to be at least CHF 10 million.
Source: BaFin Factsheet on Information on the definition of deposit business pursuant to Section 1 (1) sentence 2 no. 1 KWG and CRR and CRD IV.
Executive Summary:
Anschrift
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