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ECB nudges up UniCredit’s capital requirement to shore up defences
The European Central Bank has slightly increased the amount of capital UniCredit must hold as it takes a fresh look at banks’ assets given risks from the economic downturn and war in Ukraine.
The ECB raised UniCredit’s minimum threshold for best quality capital to 9.20% of risk-weighted assets for next year from 9.03% at present, Italy’s second-biggest bank said on Thursday.
That reflects an increase of a quarter of a percentage point in so-called Pillar 2 guidance, a bank-specific recommendation set by the ECB in addition to lenders’ binding capital requirements to make sure they can weather stress.
The setting of new capital thresholds under the SREP supervisory process to shore up banks’ defences, has fuelled tensions between lenders and the ECB, a person with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.
UniCredit’s slightly higher requirement reflects in part the regulator’s worries about the economy and also the difficulty for banks to accurately assess risks given the sudden spike in inflation and pandemic-related government support measures.
In UniCredit’s case it also reflects ECB concerns about the bank’s failure to extricate itself from Russia, a second source with knowledge of the matter added. “There is no impact on UniCredit’s 2022 and future distribution ambitions, funding plan and capital targets, which remain as per guidance,” the bank said in a statement.
At the end of September, UniCredit’s core capital stood at 15.4% of its risk-weighted assets, on a fully-loaded basis. Taking into account the new Pillar 2 requirement, UniCredit’s buffer for capital distribution is 621 basis points.