Service Bank Accounts 25% Business Lending 20%
Specialism Supervision 35% Prudential Standards 25%
2026-03-27 10:53:31 · arahman@vixio.com
ID
3006743
GUID
ca3c93ed0df0b773e6835649d4f7ca89

Classification

Service
Bank Accounts (25%)

This is a general banking competitiveness and regulatory advocacy statement with no specific payments regulation, enforcement action, or payment service innovation mentioned.

Business Lending (20%)

The update discusses broader banking sector competitiveness and regulatory framework reform, not specific payment account regulations or protections.

Specialism
Supervision (35%)

This is a general banking industry advocacy document focused on broad competitiveness and regulatory simplification, lacking specific payment compliance obligations or regulatory changes that align with the PC specialism taxonomy.

Prudential Standards (25%)

The recommendation mentions supervisory rules and regulatory frameworks, but the content is aspirational policy advocacy rather than concrete regulatory oversight or compliance requirements.

Svenska Bankföreningen har, tillsammans med branschföreningarna Finans Danmark och Finans Finland, publicerat en policyrekommendation där EU-kommissionen uppmanas att stärka de europeiska bankernas konkurrenskraft.

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TITLE: Swedish Banking Association Publishes Policy Recommendation to Strengthen European Bank Competitiveness BODY: On March 26, 2026, the Swedish Banking Association (Svenska Bankföreningen) published a policy recommendation in collaboration with Danish banking association Finans Danmark and Finnish banking association Finans Finland. The recommendation urges the European Commission to strengthen the competitiveness of European banks. The policy recommendation emphasises banks' key role in financing growth and innovation across Europe. It highlights the need for a balanced regulatory framework that promotes investment and competitiveness while maintaining financial stability. The three Nordic banking associations advocate for simplified supervisory rules, fewer national add-ons to EU regulations, no new taxes on the financial sector, and improved EU legislation. According to the associations, these measures would enable banks to contribute more effectively to economic growth and innovation. The recommendation provides a Nordic perspective and experience to inform the European Commission's forthcoming comprehensive 2026 report on competitiveness in the European banking sector. Hans Lindberg, chief executive of the Swedish Banking Association, stated that "competitiveness is built through smart regulation. We need to regulate for growth, not solely for risk." The associations emphasise that the Nordic markets offer concrete lessons in combining resilience, innovation, and trust. The European Commission's competitiveness report is expected to be presented in 2026 and will be followed by concrete legislative proposals. The Nordic banking associations' input will contribute to shaping the Commission's approach to regulatory reform in the sector. **Reference:** Swedish Banking Association (Svenska Bankföreningen) policy recommendation, March 26, 2026
  • Scraped:2026-03-27 10:53:31
  • Created:2026-03-27 10:53:31
  • By:arahman@vixio.com (35)