Finance News

Wall Street’s profit boom has Europe ripping up its banking rulebook


U.S. investment banks have toasted a record quarter, as their European rivals continue to lag — but now a major pivot towards deregulation across the Atlantic could provide a much-needed shot in the arm for the continent’s beleaguered banks.

At stake is whether Europe can build banks with the scale and firepower to compete with U.S. giants that have spent more than a decade taking market share in trading, investment banking and capital markets. A major EU deregulation push could lower capital burdens, free up balance sheets and clear the way for more cross-border mergers — potentially reshaping a banking sector long seen as too fragmented to challenge Wall Street.

The European Commission will outline its proposals in a report on banking competitiveness, due Friday, setting out legislative changes for the sector for 2027.

It is reportedly preparing to ditch parts of its “Pillar 2” capital requirements rules on leverage ratios as part of a sweeping regulatory overhaul aimed at boosting banks’ competitiveness. These rules allow national supervisors to impose additional discretionary add-ons on top of the EU’s basic 3% leverage ratio rule.

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Stoxx 600 Banks Index.

A draft version also includes measures to cut the amount of extra capital buffers that Europe’s banks must meet, a reduction in reporting requirements for lenders, and more details on a common European Deposit and Insurance Scheme, which could help unlock cross-border banking consolidation in the region, according to an FT report.

European regulators playing catch up



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