European Commission, bank reform, trading
Lords ask if ban on risky bank trading will work
8 April 2014
European plans for bank reform and a proposed ban on risky activity are to be discussed by the House of Lords EU Sub-Committee on Economic and Financial Affairs on Tuesday 8 April as part of a new investigation
- Parliament TV: Watch the evidence session on Bank Structural Reform
- Oral evidence transcript 8 April 2014 (evidence 1)
- Inquiry: Bank Structural Reform
- EU Sub Committee A: Economic and Financial Affairs
Witness
Tuesday 8 April 2014, Committee Room 3, House of Lords
10.20am
- Martin Spolc, Deputy Head of Unit, Banks and Financial Conglomerates II, DG Internal Market, European Commission.
The Committee will tomorrow, ask a representative from the European Commission what prompted it to pursue bank structural reform, and whether new rules to stop big banks from risky proprietary trading would work.
Questions
Other questions he will face include:
- Why is bank structural reform necessary?
- Why the long delay after the Liikanen High Level Group on EU bank Structural Reform report?
- Why has the Commission decided to adopt a different approach to the Liikanen model?
- How easy is it to implement a ban on proprietary trading?
- In light of the proposed derogation from important elements of the proposal, what would be the likely impact on the UK and its credit institutions?
- How do these proposals compare with the structural reform model set out in the UK Banking Reform Act 2013?