logo
Brussels launches legal action against Spain over bank merger powers

Brussels launches legal action against Spain over bank merger powers

Euractiva day ago
MADRID – The European Commission has launched an infringement procedure against Spain for granting the government sweeping powers to block bank mergers, a move Brussels says violates EU law.
The move follows the government of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez's decision to halt a proposed takeover of Banco Sabadell by BBVA and Banco Sabadell for three years.
With €719.45 billion in assets, BBVA is Spain's second-largest bank while Banco Sabadell ranks fourth, with €244.42 billion.
In a formal letter sent to Madrid, the Commission said the legal framework used to block the proposed merger breaches core EU rules on the freedom of establishment and movement of capital.
The Spanish authorities now have two months to respond. If the reply is deemed unsatisfactory, the Commission may escalate the case by issuing a reasoned opinion, Euractiv's partner Servimedia reported.
The EU executive also criticised Sánchez government for overruling the Spanish Competition Authority (CNMC), which had conditionally approved the bid.
EU sources cited by Spanish media say a 2014 banking law and its 2015 implementing decree give the economy ministry excessive discretionary power over banking operations – an area that falls under the exclusive competence of the European Central Bank.
According to the Commission, this undermines EU financial regulation and legal certainty for cross-border banking deals.
(cs, de)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

France defends €2 trillion EU budget, as Germany and others raise doubts
France defends €2 trillion EU budget, as Germany and others raise doubts

Euractiv

timean hour ago

  • Euractiv

France defends €2 trillion EU budget, as Germany and others raise doubts

The sheer amount of euros that the Commission is suggesting splashing has raised doubts at a ministerial meeting in Brussels. Euractiv is part of the Trust Project Eddy Wax and Jacob Wulff Wold Euractiv Jul 18, 2025 11:34 4 min. read News Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. France's Europe Minister Benjamin Haddad defended the idea of a larger EU budget, after German Chancellor Friedrich Merz poured doubts on a proposal to spend nearly €2 trillion between 2028 and 2034. 'We need a strong EU that gives itself the means to act," Haddad said in Brussels today, where ministers are having their first talks about the European Commission's new proposal. Haddad argued that threats from Russia and uncertainty about American security guarantees to Europe are reasons to support an "ambitious" budget. France and Ireland have also expressed strong disapproval with the proposed cuts to the bloc's farm subsidy scheme, which is set to drop by around 20% and be partially merged with other payment envelopes. Haddad said Paris will fight for every centime of farm subsidies. Ireland's Europe Minister Thomas Byrne told a radio program this morning: 'It's not something that we agree with. What we want is a strong and separate common agricultural policy that protects not just direct payments to farmers but also protects rural development funding as well.' 'Fake news,' Budget Commissioner Piotr Serafin said of the 25–30% cut to farm subsidies. 'Direct payments will remain at current levels,' he told ministers, adding that the €300 billion earmarked for such payments is a floor, not a ceiling. The governments of Germany, Finland, Sweden, the Netherlands, and Austria have been pouring scorn on the Commission's historic proposal to increase the budget from €1.2 trillion to almost €2 trillion during the next seven-year cycle. "This proposal is very, very far removed from our Austrian position, [and] approval. In the beginning, we called for careful and smart use of Europeans' taxpayers' money, and this draft is neither careful nor smart," said Austrian Europe Minister Claudia Plakolm, who described it as "extraordinarily high." "It's an enormous amount," said Finland's European Affairs Minister Joakim Strand, adding the EU should look more closely at how it spends its funds. In a statement before the meeting, Sweden's EU Minister Jessica Rosencrantz said: "The focus is right, but the size is wrong. We need a better budget, not bigger." The disagreement also spans the Commission's proposed income sources. While France labelled new EU income sources a " sine qua non condition" in its position paper, Germany's Merz has already ruled out a new EU corporate tax as illegal. Even before von der Leyen's proposal was out Sweden called a new tobacco tax "completely unacceptable." Luxembourg's Foreign Minister Xavier Bettel said: "I know the EU: everyone would like to pay less and receive more but at a certain point that no longer works, especially if we have commitments to each other to respect." Overall, Serafin appeared unshaken by the irreconcilable views of member states, praising what he called an 'extremely constructive, informative' debate with 'a lot of pragmatism.' Serafin defended the budget size, arguing that both competitiveness and defence are more effectively financed at EU level. A larger common budget could help member states meet NATO's 5% defence spending benchmark, he added. No Catalan consensus At the same meeting, Spain is also reviving its push to get Catalan, Basque, and Galician recognised as official languages of the EU, but ran into familiar headwinds over the legal and financial implications of such a move. Fernando Sampedro, Spain's state secretary for EU affairs, said that it would amount to discrimination were countries not to accept Madrid's demands, and reiterated that Spain was happy to cover all the costs. Luxembourg's Bettel said it was difficult to agree to such a move when the EU had only just signed off on new sanctions against Russia and still can't find a unified position on Israel's continued war in Gaza. 'Momentum is really not the right one if we're not able to agree on anything else," he said. Nick Alipour contributed to reporting. (mm) UPDATE: The article has been updated with Serafin's comments.

Commission releases AI Act guidelines for general purpose AI models
Commission releases AI Act guidelines for general purpose AI models

Euractiv

timean hour ago

  • Euractiv

Commission releases AI Act guidelines for general purpose AI models

On Friday the Commission published guidelines for general-purpose AI (GPAI) models under the AI Act. The AI Act puts legal obligations on providers of GPAI models, such as the large language models powering generative AI chatbots like OpenAI's ChatGPT. The document released today tackles key compliance questions for GPAIs. For example, the document defines which models count as general purpose and which companies are considered a 'provider'. The Commission also says that companies which only modify existing models are exempt from the GPAI provider rules as long as they used less than a third of the compute power that was used to train the base model. This will mean many European companies will also be exempt from having to comply with the rules for GPAI providers – since they primarily rely on modifying models trained by foreign providers. Further carve-outs exist for open source models, which the Commission guidelines more clearly define. The AI Act's rules for GPAI models start applying on August 2, although the Commission will only start enforcing them a year afterwards. AI models already on the market – such as OpenAI's most recent GPT-4o – will only have to comply another year after that, in 2027. Delays to the Commission producing compliance guidance for the AI Act have contributed to calls by industry for a pause on enforcing the law. The Commission's GPAI guidelines should not be confused with the Code of Practice for GPAIs – a voluntary set of commitments drawn up by a range of stakeholders that AI developers can sign up to as a compliance aid. The GPAI Code was also finalised earlier this month. The guidelines now outline what happens if providers sign up to the code – or not. (nl)

EU agrees revised Russia oil price cap as part of 18th sanctions package
EU agrees revised Russia oil price cap as part of 18th sanctions package

Euractiv

time3 hours ago

  • Euractiv

EU agrees revised Russia oil price cap as part of 18th sanctions package

EU member states on Friday agreed to impose a new round of sanctions against Russia, which will now include a significantly lowered Russian oil price cap and a range of new financial and trade measures. The breakthrough came after Slovakia, in an eleventh-hour move, lifted its weeks-long veto against the approval of the 18th package of sanctions on Russia after its 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Bratislava and its Russia-friendly Prime Minister Robert Fico had used its veto power to pressure the European Commission to relent on a proposed phase-out of all Russian fossil fuels by late 2027, which it argued would endanger domestic energy security. "We will keep raising the costs, so stopping the aggression becomes the only path forward for Moscow," EU's top diplomat Kaja Kallas said, while European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the EU was "striking at the heart of Russia's war machine". Reviewed price cap A key element of the package, greenlighted by EU ambassadors on Friday, is a new dynamic oil price cap mechanism, which would set the price on Russian oil exported to third countries to 15% lower than the average market price of Russian crude oil. This means, the price will now be lowered from $60 to approximately $47.60 per barrel, and is subject to a review every six months to adapt to market price changes, according to diplomatic sources. The G7 price cap was originally agreed in December 2022 by the G7 countries and aims to prevent Russia from financing the war in Ukraine. EU officials said they hoped to get the rest of the G7 countries – Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States – on board. So far, the Trump administration has not supported the price revision. The previous Biden administration had been a key driver of the overall cap idea. Brussels still hopes to get other partners on board but was said that even without others, the price cap review significantly impacts Russia's war chest. Targeting Russia's 'shadow fleet', banks, dual-use tech The new package adds 105 new listings of so-called Russian 'shadow fleet' vessels, which Moscow has used to bypass the price cap. Now, the number of banned vessels stands at over 400. It further introduces a ban on transactions with 22 Russian banks. The 18th round of sanctions also includes a new transaction ban relating to the gas pipelines Nord Stream 1 and 2 – which have not been operational since 2022 – to prevent the maintenance, operation or any future use of those pipelines. The new sanctions further restrict Moscow's access to dual-use technology by adding 26 new entities engaged in supplying Russia's military industrial-complex. Those include 11 companies in third countries: Seven from China, including three in Hong Kong and four in Turkey and a Russian-owned refinery in India, according to diplomatic sources. (vib)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store