Frankfurt am Main, Germany
As from 4 November 2014, the ECB was mandated the role to supervise centrally the financial stability of systemically relevant financial institutions based in participating countries. The Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM) is the first established part of the EU Banking Union (EBU) and will function in conjunction to the Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM). At the Colloquium experience with the SSM in the first year of its existence will be summarized. It will be evaluated to which extent the SSM is already fulfilling the declared objectives. Areas of necessary improvements will be identified. Effects on banks, credit and the macroeconomy will be discussed. The Colloquium will bring together policy makers and supervisors, academics and financial industry practitioners to exchange their views.
Conference Proceedings No 2016/3 “The SSM at 1” (pdf)
Zero Risk Contagion: Banks’ Sovereign Exposure and Sovereign Risk Spillovers, by Sascha Steffen
Is the Comprehensive Assessment really comprehensive, by Roberto Baviera
Multinational Banks and Supranational Supervision, by Jean-Edouard Colliard
Believe me, it will be enough, Governmental guarantees and banks’ risk taking in the fair value portfolio, by Jan Riepe and Maximillian Muhn
Rules and Discretion(s) in Prudential Regulation and Supervision: Evidence from EU Banks in the Run-Up to the Crisis, by Alessandro D. Scopelliti
Banks vs SSM: The party has just started…,by Anna Damaskou
Can Financial Cycle Dynamics Predict Bank Distress?, by Hanno Stremmel
Business models and their impact on bank performance: A long-term perspective, by Frederik Mergaerts
The nexus between prudential and monetary policies
Claudio Borio, Bank for International Settlements presentationShould banking supervision and monetary policy be separated?
Isabel Schnabel, University of Bonn and German Council of Economic Experts12:30-12:45 SUERF General Assembly (SUERF Members only)
Macroprudential policies to contain systemic risks
Ignazio Angeloni, Supervisory Board