site.btaEC Opens Infringement Proceedings against Bulgaria over Bank Customers' Lack of Immediate Access to Their Money
EC Opens Infringement Proceedings against Bulgaria over Bank Customers' Lack of Immediate Access 
 to Their Money
 
 
 Brussels, September 25 (BTA Correspondent Nikolay Jeliazkov) - 
 The European Commission is opening infringement proceedings 
 against Bulgaria for its failure to correctly transpose Articles
 1(3) and 10(1) of Directive 94/19/EC, the Deposit Guarantee 
 Scheme (DGS) Directive, as well as its failure to comply with 
 the principle of free movement of capital under Article 63 of 
 the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.
 
 By opening these infringement proceedings, the Commission is 
 exercising its responsibility to monitor compliance with EU law 
 by Member States. The Commission expects that depositors will be
 given immediate access to the amount of bank deposits to which 
 they are entitled.
 
 The Bulgarian deposit guarantee scheme is currently not paying 
 out on claims by depositors of Corporate Commercial Bank AD 
 (Corpbank) and Commercial Bank Victoria EAD within the timeline 
 foreseen in the DGS Directive.
 
 Corpbank suspended all operations on June 21 after a run by 
 depositors left it illiquid, and on the same day the Bulgarian 
 National Bank (BNB) placed it under conservatorship for a 
 maximum of six months to allow a thorough audit and possible 
 restructuring. 
 
 Both banks have been closed since the second half of June. 
 Depositors have not had access to their funds for three months. 
 According to a BNB decision of September 16, no decision will be
 taken before end-November. Given the severe consequences for 
 households and companies alike, Commission services have been in
 close contact with the Bulgarian authorities over the last 
 couple of weeks in order to assist the national authorities in 
 finding an adequate solution. The current situation may 
 undermine public trust in the deposit guarantee scheme in 
 Bulgaria, the Commission says.
 
 The Commission is sending a letter of formal notice to Bulgaria,
 the first formal stage in infringement proceedings. Bulgaria 
 has until October 15 to respond.
 
 The Commission claims that Bulgaria has failed to transpose the 
 Deposit Guarantee Scheme Directive, which identifies three steps
 in the procedure to allow a deposit guarantee scheme to pay the
 claims of depositors. 
 
 First, the competent authority is satisfied that a deposit which
 is due and payable has not been paid by a credit institution.
 
 Second, within five working days after this conclusion, the 
 competent authority must determine whether the credit 
 institution concerned appears to be unable for the time being, 
 for reasons which are directly related to its financial 
 circumstances, to repay deposits which are due and payable and 
 to have no current prospect of being able to do so.
 
 Third, the deposit guarantee scheme must be in a position to pay
 duly verified claims of depositors within 20 working days after
 the determination by the competent authority.
 
 Under Bulgarian law, the deposit guarantee scheme is authorized 
 to pay the claims of depositors against a credit institution 
 only if the central bank has revoked the banking licence of the 
 institution concerned. The DGS Directive contains no such 
 requirement, the Commission notes. 
 
 The unavailability of deposits is sufficient to activate the 
 deposit guarantee scheme. In the case in hand, the deposits have
 been unavailable for three months. Under general EU law 
 principles, national authorities are required to apply the 
 Directive in spite of contradicting provisions of national law.
 
 As regards the Treaty principle of free movement of capital, the
 conservatorship imposed by the Bulgarian authorities on the 
 banks concerned appears to constitute a non-justified and 
 disproportionate restriction to the free movement of capital. 
 
 The Commission notes in particular that the two banks have been 
 put into conservatorship with a complete suspension of payments 
 and bank activities, even though the domestic law allows less 
 intrusive measures, permitting a choice between full and partial
 suspension of payments and limitation of activities.
 
 In addition, the Commission recalls that EU law takes precedence
 over national law. The relevant provisions of the DGS 
 Directive, which are unconditional, sufficiently clear and 
 precise, may under certain conditions confer rights on 
 individuals and businesses. These rights can be enforced against
 the relevant bodies before a national court in order to obtain 
 payments in respect of unavailable deposits according to Article
 10(1) of the DGS Directive.
 
 The objective of this Directive is to ensure a harmonized level 
 of deposit protection by all recognized DGSs, regardless of 
 where the deposits are located in the Union.
 
 Meanwhile, BTA learned that the European Banking Authority (EBA)
 has opened an investigation into an alleged breach of Union law
 by competent authorities in Bulgaria.
 
 This investigation will look into whether measures taken in 
 Corpbank's conservatorship constitute a possible breach of the 
 requirements in the EU DGS Directive, according to which 
 depositors should be compensated no later than 25 working days 
 after the unavailability of deposits, the EBA said.
 
 The Authority may subsequently address a recommendation to the 
 concerned competent authority setting out the action necessary 
 to comply with Union law.
 
 The EBA is an independent EU Authority which works to ensure 
 effective and consistent prudential regulation and supervision 
 across the European banking sector. Its overall objectives are 
 to maintain financial stability in the EU and to safeguard the 
 integrity, efficiency and orderly functioning of the banking 
 sector.
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