Lead paragraph
The European Banking Authority (EBA) on March 24, 2026 reiterated that EU banks remain broadly resilient, citing strong capital and liquidity buffers even as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and market volatility increase transmission risks. The regulator pointed to a common equity Tier 1 (CET1) ratio of 15.1% at end-2025 and a liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) of roughly 142% as core stabilisers, while warning that earnings pressure and sovereign exposures could erode buffers if stress persists (EBA statement, Mar 24, 2026; Yahoo Finance, Mar 24, 2026). Market reaction has been muted: bank equities in the Stoxx Europe 600 Banks index are down about 6% year-to-date versus a 3% decline for the broader Stoxx Europe 600 (YTD to Mar 24, 2026), reflecting investor caution but not panic. This piece unpacks the EBA findings, quantifies near-term transmission channels, and evaluates sectoral implications for capital, funding and profitability across major European banking franchises.
Context
The EBA’s March 24, 2026 communication follows several weeks of heightened risk premium in rates and energy markets driven by the Middle East conflict. Regulators have been monitoring cross-border spillovers since late 2023 and increased surveillance of liquidity metrics since the 2024 market repricing episode. The EBA statement situates current bank health in the context of those shocks: while capital buffers are materially above regulatory minima, the pace of return-to-normal profitability remains slow, with reported return on equity (RoE) for the European banking sector averaging around 7.1% for 2025 (EBA aggregated reporting, Dec 2025). That RoE compares unfavourably with pre-pandemic averages (approximately 9–10% in 2018–19) and lags U.S. large-bank peers, which posted an average RoE near 10% in 2025.
From a structural perspective, European banks have rebuilt CET1 capital since the Global Financial Crisis through retained earnings, redenomination of risk-weighted assets and issuance of loss-absorbing instruments. The EBA’s 15.1% CET1 ratio at end-2025 is roughly 2.5 percentage points above the Basel III combined minimums commonly applied by European supervisors and well above levels seen in many emerging markets. However, the EBA explicitly notes that headline capital ratios can mask vulnerabilities in net interest margin compression, elevated operational losses and concentration in domestic sovereign exposures, particularly in the euro-area periphery.
Funding dynamics have improved since earlier episodes of strain: the LCR of approximately 142% reported by the EBA indicates a sizeable short-term liquidity cushion versus the regulatory minimum of 100%. Yet the EBA cautioned that concentrated institutional funding lines and reliance on short-term wholesale markets could become acute if deposit flight or market segmentation accelerate. The regulator’s stance, therefore, shifts from a binary assessment of buffer adequacy to a risk-sensitivity lens that emphasises scenario analysis and stress testing of off-balance-sheet exposures.
Data Deep Dive
The EBA provided three specific quantitative signals that underpin its view. First, the CET1 ratio stood at 15.1% at end-2025, versus 15.3% six months earlier, indicating modest capital erosion through the second half of 2025 (EBA aggregated data, Dec 31, 2025). Second, the LCR averaged about 142% across significant institutions, materially above the 100% regulatory threshold but down from a peak near 150% in mid-2024 as institutions redeployed high-quality liquid assets into lending and market-making. Third, non-performing loan (NPL) ratios remained low by historical European standards, at roughly 2.6% at end-2025, but showed minor upticks in a subset of lenders with concentrated SME and retail mortgage books (EBA supervisory dataset, Dec 2025).
Profitability metrics amplify the strategic challenge. Aggregate RoE of around 7.1% for 2025 implies that, at prevailing asset yields and cost bases, organic capital generation will be modest; at that rate it would take several years to materially increase loss-absorbency without issuing fresh capital or achieving substantial cost reductions. Comparatively, U.S. global megabanks reported a 2025 average RoE near 10%, giving them a competitive financing edge and higher capacity to absorb shocks without recourse to markets. The year-on-year comparison shows a decline in RoE of approximately 0.9 percentage points relative to 2024, driven by margin compression and ongoing cost inflation.
Market indicators offer a cross-check. Senior bank bond spreads widened by about 30 basis points on average across core euro-area issuers during the first quarter of 2026 versus end-2025, while subordinated and AT1 spreads were more volatile and, in some cases, spiked by as much as 90 basis points during short windows of liquidity stress (market data, Bloomberg/ICE, Mar 24, 2026). Equity valuations reflect this uncertainty: price-to-book ratios for major European banks stood near 0.7x on March 24, 2026, compared with roughly 1.0x for their U.S. counterparts.
Sector Implications
Capital allocation choices will dominate boardroom agendas over the next 12–18 months. Banks with CET1 ratios materially above peers can prioritise share buybacks and dividend distributions, but the EBA’s risk-sensitivity guidance and the opaque geopolitical shock horizon mean supervisors are likely to favour conservatism. For mid-sized banks operating with CET1 in the 12–14% band, strategic moves will likely focus on balance-sheet optimisation — reducing risk-weighted assets, securitisation where feasible, and selective deleveraging of riskier corporate exposures. The regulatory backdrop therefore tilts mildly toward capital preservation.
Funding composition will be another differentiator. Institutions with diversified deposit bases and access to stable long-term wholesale funding will navigate short-term dislocations better than those reliant on institutional corridors. The EBA’s LCR signal of 142% is a positive aggregate, but it masks heterogeneity: several cross-border banks report lower LCRs when measured at consolidated level, and intra-group flows could become constrained during heightened cross-border tensions. Market-makers and primary dealers maintaining robust inventories are likely to capture bid-offer spreads in core fixed income, but that comes with higher intraday liquidity risk.
Strategic winners are likely to be those that combine capital resilience with fee diversification. Banks that have increased fee-generating activities (asset servicing, payments, wealth management) have seen non-interest income contribute up to 40–45% of operating income in 2025 for the top quartile of European banks, improving revenue resilience against net interest margin cycles. Conversely, retail-centric banks with concentrated mortgage books in higher house-price volatility markets will face a narrower margin for error and heightened provisioning risks should unemployment rise or real incomes deteriorate further.
Risk Assessment
Three transmission channels merit monitoring. First, sovereign stress: banks with concentrated domestic government bond holdings in higher-yielding peripheral countries face a double hit of mark-to-market and sovereign-banking feedback loops if spreads widen materially. Second, deposit shocks: regional political events or sudden policy shifts could trigger deposit reallocation across currency areas, forcing banks to use backups such as central bank liquidity or expensive wholesale funding. Third, operational and cyber risk: the EBA flagged elevated risks in business continuity planning given the geopolitical backdrop, and a major operational incident could cascade into client outflows and reputational loss.
Quantitatively, a plausible adverse scenario modelled by EBA-like stress tests — a severe rate repricing, a 150-basis-point swing in sovereign spreads, and a 200-basis-point hit to net interest income over one year — could reduce aggregate CET1 by 1.0–1.5 percentage points and lift NPL ratios by 0.5–1.0 percentage points in the worst-affected cohorts. That magnitude would still leave the sector with CET1 above regulatory minima but materially compress the capital buffer that supports organic growth and distributions. Banks with pre-stress CET1 below 13% are therefore in a strategic zone where management actions will likely be required.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Our contrarian read is that headline resilience should not be conflated with cyclic immunity. The EBA’s metrics — CET1 15.1% and LCR 142% — reflect balance-sheet repair and stronger liquidity management since 2013, but they also create a complacency risk for investors and management teams. Specifically, low market-implied default probabilities priced into senior debt and modest equity valuations (price-to-book ~0.7x) create a narrow window in which disciplined capital allocation could generate outsized shareholder returns if a bank executes cost bases reductions while preserving credit quality. Conversely, banks that pursue aggressive buybacks at current RoE levels risk undercapitalising ahead of latent credit deterioration.
From an investment operations standpoint, our emphasis is on scenario-based counterparty limits and haircut stress testing for collateral in repo and securities lending businesses. Institutions should not only assess median-case capital metrics but calibrate counterparty exposure to a 1-in-25-year adverse event that compresses CET1 by at least 1 percentage point and widens funding spreads by 50–100 basis points. For asset managers and corporates, reweighting exposures toward banks with diversified fee streams and stronger deposit franchises can reduce tail risk without materially sacrificing yield. For further institutional insights and stress-testing frameworks, see our research hub on capital stress ([Fazen Insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en)).
Bottom Line
EBA’s March 24, 2026 assessment confirms that EU banks enter the current geopolitical shock with materially rebuilt capital and liquidity buffers, but persistent profitability headwinds and concentrated exposures keep the downside non-trivial. Strategic differentiation will hinge on funding diversity, fee-income mix and prudent capital allocation.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
