European Commission and IMF welcome reaffirmed commitments of the largest foreign banks in Hungary

Published: 20 November 2009 y., Friday

Monetos
In a meeting in Brussels of the European Bank Coordination Initiative held on 19 November 2009, the parent banks of the six largest foreign banks active in Hungary reaffirmed their commitments made in May 2009 to support their subsidiaries. These commitments, along with the balance of payments support package, are helping Hungary weather the economic downturn and return to a sustainable growth path.

Representatives from the European Commission and the International Monetary Fund met on Thursday, 19 November 2009 in Brussels, with the parent banks of six systemically-important Hungarian financial institutions. The six EU-based banks are Bayerische Landesbank, Erste Group Bank, RZB Group, Intesa SanPaolo, KBC Group and Unicredit Group. The meeting was also attended by the Hungarian financial supervisor, home country supervisors and fiscal authorities, the National Bank of Hungary, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the European Investment Bank, the World Bank Group and the European Central Bank. The purpose of this meeting was to take stock of the macroeconomic situation and to add specificity to the general commitments made on 20 May 2009, also in Brussels (see Concluding Statement by Participating Banks ).

The participants expressed satisfaction over the positive role that the bank coordination group has played in averting a deeper crisis in Hungary in the past year along side international financial assistance and the government’s stabilization and reform policies. Parent banks have behaved as responsible owners, increasing their exposures over the past year and maintaining adequate capital in their subsidiaries. The banking system’s capital adequacy ratio was 13% in September 2009. Participants also welcomed the positive conclusion, earlier this week, by the IMF and the European Commission of their respective reviews of the economic programme with Hungary.

Looking ahead, the economic outlook and market access are improving though ensuring that the economy is supported by an adequate supply of credit remains a key priority. Participants underlined that continued engagement of cross-border banks in Hungary and the government's determined implementation of its economic programme reinforce each other in strengthening the Hungarian economy and supporting the recovery.

To this end, taking into account the outcome of the 24 September 2009 Full-Forum Initiative and Hungary’s improved external position, the six parent banks are expected to submit specific bilateral commitment letters in the coming weeks. The commitments include maintaining an appropriate capital adequacy ratio and exposure of at least 95% of the September 2008 level for the duration of the programme. Along with the international financial support package, they will help Hungary's banking system weather the economic downturn, support investor confidence and promote sustainable growth.

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Central Government Debt in January

According to the data presented by the Ministry of Finance, in end-January central government debt made up LTL26, 310.8 million or 28% of projected GDP for 2010 (LTL 93, 819 million). more »

China crisis getting worse

As far as countries affected by the economic crisis, China fared extremely well. more »

State aid: Commission authorises temporary Slovak scheme to grant limited amounts of aid of up to €15,000 to farmers

The European Commission has authorised today a Slovak scheme with a budget of approximately €3.32 million which aims at supporting farmers in Slovakia who encounter difficulties as a result of the current economic crisis. more »

Europe 2020: Commission proposes new economic strategy

Commission sets out a 10-year strategy for reviving the European economy, casting a vision of ‘smart, sustainable, inclusive' growth rooted in greater coordination of national and European policy. more »

Europe 2020: Commission proposes new economic strategy in Europe

The European Commission has launched today the Europe 2020 Strategy to go out of the crisis and prepare EU economy for the next decade. The Commission identifies three key drivers for growth, to be implemented through concrete actions at EU and national levels. more »

EU Aid Programme for Turkish Cypriot Community

Launching of the “SCHOOLS’ initiative for innovation and changes” Grant scheme. more »

Transaction tax and debt moratorium needed to meet development needs, say MEPs

EU Member States must not only deliver on their international aid pledges, but also bring in a financial transactions tax and a temporary debt moratorium, to help developing countries to cope with the effects of the global financial and economic crisis, said the Development Committee on Monday. more »

EBRD offers new funds to promote sustainable energy investments in Slovakia

The EBRD is increasing its commitments to promote sustainable energy projects in Slovakia with a new €90 million funding under the existing Slovakia Sustainable Energy Finance Facility (SLOVSEFF) to ensure continuous implementation of energy efficiency and small renewable energy projects. more »

During 2009 Bank SNORAS earned LTL 8.7 million profit

According to the unaudited data, in 2009 AB Bank SNORAS earned LTL 8.7 million profit. The bank’s assets grew by 11 per cent up to LTL 6.342 billion during 2009 and were by LTL 647.8 million larger than at the beginning of 2009. more »

Airport charges: security is Member States' responsibility, say MEPs

Aviation security measures that go beyond common EU requirements should be paid for by Member States, not by passengers, said Transport Committee MEPs in a vote on Monday that could put Parliament on a collision course with the Council of Ministers. more »