The European Parliament adopted by 552 votes to 111 with 32 abstentions, a resolution tabled by the Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs, on Building a Capital Markets Union (CMU).
A genuine European approach: Parliament wanted to see a genuine European approach to capital markets. This approach might draw on the experiences from other parts of the world (e.g. the United States) and should duly take into account international developments so that Europe remained attractive for international investors.
The Commission was asked to establish a European approach to strengthen the diversification of funding sources and investments in European businesses. A CMU should build upon the characteristics and interdependence of the European banking and capital markets landscape. It should bear in mind the specificities of the European model for financing of businesses, and the need to develop reliable non-bank sources of finance for growth and to complement these with ways for market participants to raise debt, equity and venture capital directly from the market.
Members stressed, however, that a level playing field among participants must be ensured for similar financing activities and that the key aim for all sectors must be to improve capital allocation across the European economy and make better use of capital stocks that remain idle today.
Parliament recommended the following action:
Building blocks of a Capital Markets Union: Parliament took the view that the CMU should follow a step-by-step approach and that the priorities of the CMU should be threefold:
The resolution stressed the following points:
Bringing the capital markets closer to SMEs: the difficulty of obtaining bank credit for SMEs meant alternatives to bank financing were needed, in particular by improving the business environment for venture capital, peer-to-peer funds, private placement, SME loan securitisation and promotion of credit unions, and also through standardising the rules concerning public-private partnerships (PPPs) throughout the EU.
Parliament underlined that a positive environment for successful SME financing included the need for SME-friendly economic and regulatory conditions, both at EU and national level. It drew attention to a possible simplification of procedures for the access to IPOs by SMEs and mid-cap companies, while ensuring that firm criteria to assess the resilience and eligibility of businesses for an IPO remained. Parliament called on the Commission to look at what more can be done to help SMEs to attract investment.
Creating a coherent EU regulatory environment for capital markets: Members called on the Commission and Member States to review the over-burdensome regulation for equity financing of private companies.
Furthermore, aware that the heterogeneity of insolvency rules, Parliament noted the Commissions suggestion of addressing cross-border insolvency to the extent necessary for achieving a well-functioning CMU. It called for the establishment of a recovery and resolution framework for non-banks, in particular central counterparties (CCPs).
It recalled the role of payments systems and securities settlements for the securitisation market and called for a European market infrastructure to be established for this purpose. It also encouraged the Commission to increase the comparability and quality of financial information.
The Commission was asked to speed up its work on the action plan for a CMU and put forward legislative and non-legislative proposals as soon as possible to achieve the objective of a fully integrated single EU capital market by the end of 2018.