The Big Picture: Why Europe Is Rewriting Its Banking Rules
The European Union just dropped a massive plan to shake up its banking system. The goal? Make European banks bigger, stronger, and able to compete with their American rivals.
The package was presented on July 17 by Maria Luis Albuquerque, who serves as the EU's financial services commissioner. It runs nearly 9,000 words, and it tackles problems that have nagged European banks for years. "EU banks lack scale to compete both internationally and domestically," she said.
That lack of scale is the core issue. European banks are often stuck operating inside national borders, with different rules in every country. That makes it hard to grow. Meanwhile, U.S. banks have been getting a boost from President Trump's deregulation push, which has loosened requirements on capital and lending.
Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, put it simply: "Getting capital flowing is how we will get Europe growing."
The package aims to address this by removing national barriers, streamlining capital structure elements, and promoting the unrestricted movement of capital across the bloc's borders. It is a direct answer to the U.S. deregulation trend, and it signals that Europe wants its banks to play on a bigger field.
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What's Actually in the Package
The commission also committed to re-examining a contentious "output floor" that restricts banks' use of internal models for capital calculations.
Bank leaders are cautiously optimistic. EMEA co-CEO Matthieu Wiltz of JPMorganChase & Co described the plan as "Europe's best opportunity in years for banks to fulfill their full potential in supporting and helping grow the real economy."
Deutsche Bank AG CEO Christian Sewing, who also heads the Association of German Banks, agreed but cautioned on timing. "It is now important to set clear priorities so that tangible improvements can be achieved quickly," he said.
Not everyone is cheering without guardrails. The European Central Bank, which supervises the region's largest lenders, reminded everyone that resilience cannot be sacrificed. A spokesperson said, "Europe should safeguard the resilience of its banking sector, which remains key to financial stability."
What It Means for Your Portfolio
The work is not done yet. The European Commission must present concrete proposals before the end of March 2027; any legislative changes will then need to be hammered out with the European Parliament and Council. That process could get messy if the commission takes an all-or-nothing approach that leaves little room for compromise.
But for investors, the direction is clear. Big European banks like Credit Agricole, Commerzbank, Societe Generale, ING, and UniCredit could see their businesses change significantly. The plan addresses several of the most stubborn problems in European banking, raising worries about eventual consensus.
The European Commission also added a clause about exploring ways to "ensure access to lending for IP-intensive companies and more broadly for the immaterial economy," "a group that includes AI companies and other firms whose main asset is knowledge rather than hard goods".
The bottom line: The European Union is rewriting its banking rulebook. The next year and a half will show whether the EU can turn this ambitious plan into real law - and whether its banks can finally match the scale and power of their U.S. competitors.
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