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"BRUBEG" in context

Published in Hanten/Dengl/Gaida/Schlothofer BKR 2026, 193

This article, originally published in BKR 2026, 193 in German, examines BRUBEG as the legislative instrument implementing CRD VI within an increasingly integrated European banking supervisory framework. It contends that BRUBEG is to be understood not as a measure of substantive reform, but rather as an act of consolidation and implementation, the principal significance of which lies in its governance effects within a multi-level supervisory system.

  • Drawing upon the new provisions concerning third-country branches, governance requirements and ESG regulation, the article elucidates the structural limits inherent in nationally framed deregulatory objectives and analyses the concomitant shift in regulatory technique away from traditional quantitative requirements towards instruments centred on data, reporting and forward-looking planning.
  • It further identifies potential risks to the consistency and uniformity of supervisory enforcement — for example, in relation to reverse solicitation — and situates BRUBEG within a continuing phase of regulatory consolidation, in which regulatory “relief” manifests primarily as a question of administrative architecture and practical enforceability.

In sum, the article characterises BRUBEG as forming part of a broader development whereby the effectiveness of banking regulation increasingly depends upon supervisory practice, institutional implementation and the design of administrative structures, rather than upon amendments to the formal corpus of rules. It concludes by addressing the unresolved and particularly delicate question of the future function of § 53 KWG within this evolving framework. The latter provision, while itself only marginally amended, must now be interpreted in the context of the newly enacted provisions introduced by BRUBEG.

Authors: Mathias Hanten, David Gaida, Gerhard Dengl, Franz Schlothofer

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