Macroprudential Policy


Financial stability is a global public good characterised by non-rivalry and non-excludability, which cannot be provided exclusively by the market, the central bank and other public institutions playing an important part in ensuring financial stability, and it can only be maintained through a synergistic effort and cooperation between authorities, financial institutions and entities operating in the real sector. Moreover, considering Romania’s status as an open economy, a cross-border approach via coordinating the related policies is required in order to achieve financial stability at national level.

The National Bank of Romania develops and implements the macroprudential policy strategy within its scope of competence.

The intermediate objectives of the macroprudential policy assumed by the NBR, completely harmonised with the specific EU recommendations are: (i) to mitigate and prevent excessive credit growth and leverage, (ii) to mitigate and prevent excessive maturity mismatch and market illiquidity, (iii) to limit direct and indirect exposure concentrations, (iv) to limit moral hazard and (v) to strengthen the resilience of financial infrastructures. With a view to achieving the ultimate objective of safeguarding the financial system stability, the NBR selected, in addition to the intermediate objectives of macroprudential policy recommended at EU level, two nationally specific objectives, i.e. the sustainable increase in financial intermediation and the improvement in financial inclusion, for which it has come up with specific instruments. For further details, see the Financial Stability Report, December 2017.

According to Recommendation ESRB/2011/3 on the macroprudential mandate of national authorities, sub-recommendation B, point 3, Member States are required to ensure that the central bank plays a leading role in the macroprudential policy and that macroprudential policy does not undermine its independence in accordance with Article 130 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.

Romania’s macroprudential strategy is approved by the National Committee for Macroprudential Oversight (NCMO) and implemented at sectoral level by the NBR, the FSA and the Government, based on the NCMO recommendations.



Capital Buffers

The CRD IV/CRR regulatory package supplemented by CRD V/CRR II regulatory package makes available a set of macroprudential instruments that national competent authorities can resort to with a view to preventing the emergence of cyclical systemic risks or mitigating structural systemic risks, such as: a) the capital conservation buffer; b) the countercyclical capital buffer; c) the buffer for other systemically important institutions; d) the systemic risk buffer. Regulating capital buffers aimed to (i) ensure a level playing field between EU Member States, as an essential pre-requisite for the functioning of the internal market, (ii) prevent regulatory arbitrage, (iii) ensure maximum harmonisation, and (iv) enhance transparency and predictability in the macroprudential field.

The National Bank of Romania periodically conducts assessments regarding the activation/deactivation/recalibration on capital buffers, which are subsequently discussed by the National Committee for Macroprudential Oversight (NCMO) with a view to adopting recommendations related to macroprudential measures.

The capital buffer-related macroprudential measures adopted by the NBR are implemented pursuant to National Committee for Macroprudential Oversight’s recommendations, via the NBR orders issued to this end.

Additionally, the National Bank of Romania details the adopted macroprudential measures, the instruments used as well as the latest practices resorted to by EU Member States in the section dedicated to these matters, under the Financial Stability Report: 2006-2015 | 2016→


The capital conservation buffer

The capital conservation buffer is aimed at increasing credit institutions’ resilience, namely their capacity to absorb potential losses arising from the banking activity. The buffer is comprised of Common Equity Tier 1 capital equal to 2.5 percent of the total risk exposure amount, and its implementation can be tailored to country-specific situations, as follows:

  1. accelerated build-up, in line with a schedule set by the national competent authorities;
  2. phased in between 1 January 2016 and 1 January 2019 in equal increments of 0.625 percent per annum.

In Romania, the capital conservation buffer has been phased in starting 1 January 2016, in equal increments of 0.625 percent per annum, as follows:

  1. As of 1 January 2016 – 0.625 percent
  2. As of 1 January 2017 – 1.25 percent
  3. As of 1 January 2018 – 1.875 percent
  4. As of 1 January 2019 – 2.5 percent

↑ sus

The countercyclical capital buffer

The countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB – countercyclical capital buffer) is part of the macroprudential toolkit included in the CRD IV/CRR legislative framework. The European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB) recommends this instrument to be implemented in order to achieve the intermediate objective of reducing and preventing excessive credit growth and leverage. The aim of the CCyB is to improve the banking sector’s resilience to possible shocks generated by the unsustainable growth of credit and leverage.. The decision to activate the countercyclical capital buffer is based on the deviation of the credit-to-GDP ratio from its long-term trend (the main indicator, as recommended by the ESRB), as well as the analysis of additional indicators capturing potential vulnerabilities in the development of credit and leverage in different segments of the real economy. The release of the CCyB can take place either as a result of the materialisation of the risk or as a result of the successful mitigation of said risk.

Initially, the CRD IV regulatory package introduced the countercyclical capital buffer instrument for monitoring the credit market developments at aggregate level. Given the need to asses and identify any disproportionate build-up of risks within specific lending structures (e.g. a concentration of foreign currency lending, unsustainable developments on the real estate market, etc.), CRD V brought additions to the regulatory framework from this point of view. In Romania, besides CCyB, which has the potential to adjust the supply of loans, additional macroprudential tools such as LTV (Loan to Value), DSTI (Debt Service to Income) or sectoral limits were implemented, in order to achieve the objective of maintaining credits’ demand within prudent limits (as set forth in the ESRB recommendations as well).

In Romania, the countercyclical capital buffer was introduced starting January 1, 2016, being maintained at the level of 0 percent until 2022. The first change of the CCyB rate was adopted during the NCMO meeting on October 14, 2021, when the members of the General Board unanimously decided to approve NCMO Recommendation No. R/7/2021 on the countercyclical capital buffer through which the National Bank of Romania is recommended to increase the rate of the countercyclical capital buffer to the level of 0.5 percent, from 0 percent, starting October 17, 2022. The NCMO's recommendation took into account the pronounced increase in lending activity, recorded in the context of tensions at the level of macroeconomic balances, especially through the channel of twin deficits - budgetary and current account. In order to implement NCMO Recommendation No. R/7/2021, the National Bank of Romania issued NBR Order No. 6/2021 amending the NBR Order No. 12/2015 on the capital conservation buffer and the countercyclical capital buffer (published in the Official Gazette, Part I No. 1130 of November 26, 2021). In the context of an additional accumulation of risks to financial stability compared to previous analyses, the General Board decided at the NCMO meeting on October 20, 2022 to recalibrate the rate of the countercyclical capital buffer to the level of 1 percent, starting on October 23, 2023 (NCMO Recommendation No. R/4/2022). The recommendation was implemented by issuing Order No. 7/2022 amending the NBR Order No. 12/2015 on the capital conservation buffer and the countercyclical capital buffer (published in the Official Gazette, Part I No. 1187 of 12.12.2022).


Indicators used for setting the Counter Cyclical Buffer Rate

↑ sus

The capital buffer for other systemically important institutions (O-SII)

The NBR has implemented at national level the methodology for identifying systemically important credit institutions in line with the EBA Guidelines. The criteria for assessing domestic systemically important institutions are as follows:

  1. in the first stage, a score is calculated based on the mandatory indicators laid down in the EBA Guidelines on the assessment of O-SIIs, at the highest consolidation level, for the entities under the national competent authority’s jurisdiction, including subsidiaries in other Member States and third countries. This mandatory stage helps achieve an appropriate degree of convergence in terms of identifying O-SIIs across Member States and making the assessment of O-SIIs comparable, transparent and comprehensible;
  2. in the second stage, the national competent authority uses additional indicators selected from the list of optional indicators in the EBA Guidelines. The additional indicators should reflect the specificities of the national banking sector, with a view to identifying all systemic institutions, including smaller ones, which have not been automatically designated as systemic during the first stage. The need for this step arises from the differences in terms of size and specificities of national financial systems across Member States.

The two stages strike a balance between convergence, comparability and flexibility in identifying systemic institutions.

In Romania, the O-SII buffer was implemented as of January 1st, 2016. The O-SII buffer is applicable to credit institutions identified as having systemic importance according to the methodology harmonized with the provisions of the Guidelines on the criteria to determine the conditions of application of Article 131(3) of Directive 2013/36/EU (CRD) in relation to the assessment of other systemically important institutions (O-SIIs), as follows:


Methodology for identifying systemic credit institutions and calibrating the O-SII buffer (overview)



↑ sus

The systemic risk buffer

The systemic risk buffer (Systemic Risk Buffer - SyRB) aims to prevent and mitigate long-term structural systemic risk or macroprudential risk with potential negative consequences for the financial system and real economy, being a flexible instrument that can be used by the member states in order to reduce the risks identified within the national financial system. In Romania, the instrument has been used since 2018. From a methodological point of view, credit institutions determine the level of the capital buffer for systemic risk taking into account the indicators for assessing the quality of assets, respectively the rate of non-performing loans and the level of coverage with provisions of non-performing loans. Depending on the average recorded by above mentioned indicators for a period of 12 months prior to application, the SyRB buffer is set at the level of zero percent, 1 percent or 2 percent. The decision for each of these buffer rates is done by taking into account the established reference thresholds (5 percent for the NPL ratio and 55 percent for the NPL coverage ratio).

Implementation

↑ sus