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What Firms Need to Know

The new EU Capital Requirements Directive (CRD6) establishes a new harmonised and more restrictive framework for cross-border banking and lending into the EU. The new third country branch (TCB) rules will prohibit the provision of certain banking services into the EU on a cross-border basis by firms outside the EU, unless done in accordance with limited exemptions.

Banks and investment firms meeting the scope requirements, who today may rely on national regimes or exemptions in order lawfully to access clients in certain Member States, will in future be required to open a branch and seek authorisation in each Member State where they take deposits, engage in lending, and/or provide guarantees/commitments, unless they can rely on one of the limited pan-EU exemptions established under CRD6. Once authorised, a harmonised set of minimum compliance requirements will apply to TCBs. TCBs will have no passporting rights of their own, and therefore firms seeking to operate in multiple Member States may require multiple TCBs to be established or consider subsidiarisation in order to benefit from the passport.

These new requirements are a step change in policy and will restrict the provision of agile cross-border financial services into the EU, with the potential to significantly impact the commercial lending market in particular.

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Author

Dr. Conrad Ruppel is a financial regulatory partner in Baker McKenzie's Banking & Finance Practice Group in Germany, Frankfurt. Conrad advises financial services clients, investment banks, fund managers and institutional investors on a wide range of financial regulatory issues throughout the business lifecycle. A particular focus of his work is on FinTech and digital assets projects. Prior to joining Baker McKenzie in 2024, Conrad worked for leading German and international law firms. He has gained work experience at Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley in Frankfurt and London during his client secondments. Conrad was admitted to the German bar in 2014. Conrad is a university lecturer at the ILF (Institute for Law and Finance) at the Goethe University Frankfurt and at the Fulda University of Applied Sciences. He has authored a number of articles and contributions for leading journals and other publications.

Author

Mark heads the Financial Services & Regulatory (FSR) practice group in London and co-leads the FinTech group. He also acts as Chair of the FSR practice for the EMEA region and sits on the Global FSR Steering Committee. Mark is ranked as a Leading Individual in Legal 500 2022 for Financial Services (Non-Contentious Regulatory) and is individually ranked in Chambers 2022 for FinTech. He is described in these publications as being "very knowledgeable" and "very approachable" with "a wonderful range of FinTech experience" and as someone who is "clear, commercial and pragmatic and understands all the issues in detail." He has authored a number of articles and contributions for leading journals and other publications, most notably the Journal of International Banking and Financial Law, the International Guide to Money Laundering Law and Practice, and A Practitioner's Guide to the Law and Regulation of Financial Crime.

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Kimberly Everitt is Baker McKenzie's knowledge lawyer for Financial Services Regulation & Enforcement, covering the EMEA region, and brings over a decade of experience to the team in both knowledge and fee-earning roles. Prior to joining Baker McKenzie, Kim held roles specializing in contentious financial services regulation knowledge, and her fee-earning roles covered non-contentious regulation in the private equity and general financial services sectors.