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FRANKFURT: The European Central Bank will increase scrutiny over how banks manage credit risk and diversify funding, it said on Monday while outlining its 2023 priorities as the euro zone heads into a likely recession and faces soaring borrowing costs.

The 19-country currency bloc is facing the double whammy of sky-high inflation and a sharp economic downturn, largely a fallout of Russia’s war in Ukraine, which has forced the ECB to tighten financing conditions even as it exacerbates economic pain.

The ECB, which supervises more than 100 big banks in Europe, said it will now take a closer look at lenders exposed to the most vulnerable sectors, including energy and energy trading, and will also keep a close eye on residential mortgages and commercial real estate.

“Higher interest rates and a sluggish or possibly recessionary growth outlook may challenge the debt-servicing capacity of borrowers going forward,” the ECB said in a statement.

A recent supervisory review also confirmed shortcomings in banks’ risk controls, particularly in monitoring loans, classifying distressed borrowers and provisioning, the ECB said.

Euro zone yields hover near lowest levels in months ahead of ECB meeting

“This renders banks vulnerable to a sharp correction in some property markets, especially the residential real estate segment, given the price dynamics observed in recent years,” the ECB said.

The ECB will conduct more targeted reviews at lenders in order to encourage “fair and timely” recognition of expected credit losses via higher provisions.

“Moreover, surging interest rates and higher construction costs are likely to negatively affect the commercial real estate market, especially the office sector, which is already reeling from the shift in work practices and search for quality arising from the pandemic,” the supervisor said.

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