Fewer than 10 UK-based banks have asked for EU licence as Brexit looms - sources

Reuters  |  FRANKFURT 

By Francesco Canepa

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Fewer than 10 of the approximately 40 that conduct business out of have applied so far for a licence to continue in the bloc after leaves, regulatory sources told

The slow pace of applications is raising concern at the European Central Bank, the EU's top supervisor, that some lenders are not doing enough to prepare for Brexit, or may even avoid its watch through a gap in the rules.

The past two months have seen a pick-up in the number of saying they plan to set up new subsidiaries after Brexit, with most major U.S., British and Japanese saying they will establish units in Frankfurt or Dublin.

But supervisory sources say they have still seen few formal applications for licences.

"We're having lots of meetings but not enough concrete action," one supervisor said.

While does not leave the until March 2019, bank executives have said time is already running out: it could take 18 months or more to set up a new subsidiary, given the need to relocate staff, get the requisite technology and change contractual arrangements with clients.

The location of investment banks' European headquarters is a major issue during Britain's negotiations to leave the Companies across the bloc depend for financing on global whose European arms are now mainly based in The Bank of England estimates that half of all the debt and equity issued in the involves financial institutions in

Big have warned a "hard Brexit" could trigger financial instability if they were to suddenly lose access to markets. On Friday, Europe's industry group said central would need to be ready to inject cash into financial markets to help keep them stable.

The application for a licence, to an member state's national regulator and to the ECB, can take 6-12 months, and possibly longer if many apply at the same time. Three sources at different watchdogs told the total number of that had submitted applications so far across Europe was still in single digits.

The declined to comment on the number of applications made, but has previously expressed concern that are behind in their preparations.

"A number of the larger have made progress in their planning," Sabine Lautenschlaeger, who represents the ECB's supervisory arm on the board, said last month. "But we have not seen many final decisions yet."

A spokesman at German regulator Bafin said it had received some applications and expected this to swell into double-digits eventually. The Central Bank of Ireland did not receive any applications in the first half of the year, its mid-year report shows.

SUBSIDIARIES

According to Lautenschlaeger, there are around 40 that now conduct business in other countries from bases. These include lenders, the big Wall Street investment and smaller groups from Asia and the Middle East.

To receive permission to operate new or expanded subsidiaries in the EU, they would have to subject their business plans, safety and the fitness of managers and investors to national and supervisors.

Most major international and already operate small licensed subsidiaries in at least one other country, but would still need expanded regulatory approval to transfer big chunks of their business to them.

In at least five cases -- Barclays, Citi, HSBC, JPMorgan and State Street -- European subsidiaries are already big enough to be directly supervised by the ECB, although they may need further permission to expand their operations.

Barclays has said it plans to secure an expanded licence for its subsidiary in Ireland. Among other big banks, Royal Bank of Scotland is negotiating with Dutch supervisors about moving some of its staff and business to its subsidiary in the Netherlands, while Lloyds and Standard Chartered plan to make formal submissions this year.

ESCAPING SCRUTINY

The has complained that some firms could avoid its supervision by setting up market divisions, known as broker-dealers, rather than full-blown

A gap in financial rules means brokers do not need to be approved by the ECB, only by the national market supervisor of the country they base themselves in.

Bank subsidiaries that obtain only a broker-dealer licence, rather than an licence, would not be able to take deposits or write loans for clients, but they could still deal in securities. The worries that if avoid their supervision it could bring additional risks.

Global investment bank Morgan Stanley may be among those taking this route. A source has told the U.S. firm, which already has a licensed bank in Germany, has applied for a brokerage licence from German market and supervisor Bafin.

The has asked lawmakers to close the loophole that allows to obtain brokerage licences without supervision, but this has yet to happen.

Another factor keeping some from moving too fast in their Brexit plans is the challenge of negotiating with staff about moving out of

"The delay in applications could also be due to considerations not to lose top-level employees," a German supervisor said.

(Additional reporting by Frank Siebelt and Tom Sims in Frankfurt; Rachel Armstrong, Anjuli Davies, Andrew MacAskill and Lawrence White in and Padraic Halpin in Dublin; editing by Peter Graff)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, September 06 2017. 15:04 IST