Directive 94/19/EC OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND
OF THE COUNCIL of 30 May 1994 on deposit-guarantee
schemes
THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL OF
THE EUROPEAN UNION,
Having regard to the Treaty establishing
the European Community, and in particular
the first and third sentences of Article 57
(2) thereof,
Having regard to the proposal from the Commission
(1),
Having regard to the opinion of the Economic
and Social Committee (2),
Acting in accordance with the procedure referred
to in Article 189b of the Treaty (3),
Whereas, in accordance with the objectives
of the Treaty, the harmonious development
of the activities of credit institutions throughout
the Community should be promoted through the
elimination of all restrictions on the right
of establishment and the freedom to provide
services, while increasing the stability of
the banking system and protection for savers;
Whereas, when restrictions on the activities
of credit institutions are eliminated, consideration
should be given to the situation which might
arise if deposits in a credit institution
that has branches in other Member States become
unavailable; whereas it is indispensable to
ensure a harmonized minimum level of deposit
protection wherever deposits are located in
the Community; whereas such deposit protection
is as essential as the prudential rules for
the completion of the single banking market;
Whereas in the event of the closure of an
insolvent credit institution the depositors
at any branches situated in a Member State
other than that in which the credit institution
has its head office must be protected by the
same guarantee scheme as the institution's
other depositors;
Whereas the cost to credit institutions of
participating in a guarantee scheme bears
no relation to the cost that would result
from a massive withdrawal of bank deposits
not only from a credit institution in difficulties
but also from healthy institutions following
a loss of depositor confidence in the soundness
of the banking system;
Whereas the action the Member States have
taken in response to Commission recommendation
87/63/EEC of 22 December 1986 concerning the
introduction of deposit-guarantee schemes
in the Community (4) has not fully achieved
the desired result; whereas that situation
may prove prejudicial to the proper functioning
of the internal market;
Whereas the Second Council Directive 89/646/EEC
of 15 December 1989 on the coordination of
laws, regulations and administrative provisions
relating to the taking up and pursuit of the
business of credit institutions and amending
Directive 77/780/EEC (5), provides for a system
for the single authorization of each credit
institution and its supervision by the authorities
of its home Member State, which entered into
force on 1 January 1993;
Whereas a branch no longer requires authorization
in any host Member State, because the single
authorization is valid throughout the Community,
and its solvency will be monitored by the
competent authorities of its home Member State;
whereas that situation justifies covering
all the branches of the same credit institution
set up in the Community by means of a single
guarantee scheme; whereas that scheme can
only be that which exists for that category
of institution in the State in which that
institution's head office is situated, in
particular because of the link which exists
between the supervision of a branch's solvency
and its membership of a deposit-guarantee
scheme;
Whereas harmonization must be confined to
the main elements of deposit-guarantee schemes
and, within a very short period, ensure payments
under a guarantee calculated on the basis
of a harmonized minimum level;
Whereas deposit-guarantee schemes must intervene
as soon as deposits become unavailable;
Whereas it is appropriate to exclude from
cover, in particular, the deposits made by
credit institutions on their own behalf and
for own account; whereas that should not prejudice
the right of a guarantee scheme to take any
measures necessary for the rescue of a credit
institution that finds itself in difficulties,
Whereas the harmonization of deposit-guarantee
schemes within the Community does not of itself
call into question the existence of systems
in operation designed to protect credit institutions,
in particular by ensuring their solvency and
liquidity, so that deposits with such credit
institutions, including their branches established
in other Member States, will not become unavailable;
whereas such alternative systems serving a
different protective purpose may, subject
to certain conditions, be deemed by the competent
authorities to satisfy the objectives of this
Directive; whereas it will be for those competent
authorities to verify compliance with those
conditions;
Whereas several Member States have deposit-protection
schemes under the responsibility of professional
organizations, other Member States have schemes
set up and regulated on a statutory basis
and some schemes, although set up on a contractual
basis, are partly regulated by statute; whereas
that variety of status poses a problem only
with regard to compulsory membership of and
exclusion from schemes; whereas it is therefore
necessary to take steps to limit the powers
of schemes in this area;
Whereas the retention in the Community of
schemes providing cover for deposits which
is higher than the harmonized minimum may,
within the same territory, lead to disparities
in compensation and unequal conditions of
competition between national institutions
and branches of institutions from other Member
States; whereas, in order to counteract those
disadvantages, branches should be authorized
to join their host countries' schemes so that
they can offer their depositors the same guarantees
as are offered by the schemes of the countries
in which they are located; whereas it is appropriate
that after a number of years the Commission
should report on the extent to which branches
have made use of this option and on the difficulties
which they or the guarantee schemes may have
encountered in implementing these provisions;
whereas it is not ruled out that home Member
State schemes should themselves offer such
complementary cover, subject to the conditions
such schemes may lay down;
Whereas market disturbances could be caused
by branches of credit institutions which offer
levels of cover higher than those offered
by credit institutions authorized in their
host Member States; whereas it is not appropriate
that the level of scope of cover offered by
guarantee schemes should become an instrument
of competition; whereas it is therefore necessary,
at least during an initial period, to stipulate
that the level and scope of cover offered
by a home Member State scheme to depositors
at branches located in another Member State
should not exceed the maximum level and scope
offered by the corresponding scheme in the
host Member State; whereas possible market
disturbances should be reviewed after a number
of years, on the basis of the experience acquired
and in the light of developments in the banking
sector;
Whereas in principle this Directive requires
every credit institution to join a deposit-guarantee
scheme; whereas the Directives governing the
admission of any credit institution which
has its head office in a non-member country,
and in particular the First Council Directive
(77/780/EEC) of 12 December 1977 on the coordination
of the laws, regulations and administrative
provisions relating to the taking up and pursuit
of the business of credit institutions (1)
allow Member States to decide whether and
subject to what conditions to permit the branches
of such credit institutions to operate within
their territories; whereas such branches will
not enjoy the freedom to provide services
under the second paragraph of Article 59 of
the Treaty, nor the right of establishment
in Member States other than those in which
they are established; whereas, accordingly,
a Member State admitting such branches should
decide how to apply the principles of this
Directive to such branches in accordance with
Article 9 (1) of Directive 77/780/EEC and
with the need to protect depositors and maintain
the integrity of the financial system; whereas
it is essential that depositors at such branches
should be fully aware of the guarantee arrangements
which affect them;
Whereas, on the one hand, the minimum guarantee
level prescribed in this Directive should
not leave too great a proportion of deposits
without protection in the interest both of
consumer protection and of the stability of
the financial system; whereas, on the other
hand, it would not be appropriate to impose
throughout the Community a level of protection
which might in certain cases have the effect
of encouraging the unsound management of credit
institutions; whereas the cost of funding
schemes should be taken into account; whereas
it would appear reasonable to set the harmonized
minimum guarantee level at ECU 20 000; whereas
limited transitional arrangements might be
necessary to enable schemes to comply with
that figure;
Whereas some Member States offer depositors
cover for their deposits which is higher than
the harmonized minimum guarantee level provided
for in this Directive; whereas it does not
seem appropriate to require that such schemes,
certain of which have been introduced only
recently pursuant to recommendation 87/63/EEC,
be amended on this point;
Whereas a Member State must be able to exclude
certain categories of specifically listed
deposits or depositors, if it does not consider
that they need special protection, from the
guarantee afforded by deposit-guarantee schemes;
Whereas in certain Member States, in order
to encourage depositors to look carefully
at the quality of credit institutions, unavailable
deposits are not fully reimbursed; whereas
such practices should be limited in respect
of deposits falling below the minimum harmonized
level;
Whereas the principle of a harmonized minimum
limit per depositor rather than per deposit
has been retained; whereas it is therefore
appropriate to take into consideration the
deposits made by depositors who either are
not mentioned as holders of an account or
are not the sole holders; whereas the limit
must therefore be applied to each identifiable
depositor; whereas that should not apply to
collective investment undertakings subject
to special protection rules which do not apply
to the aforementioned deposits;
Whereas information is an essential element
in depositor protection and must therefore
also be the subject of a minimum number of
binding provisions; whereas, however, the
unregulated use in advertising of references
to the amount and scope of a deposit-guarantee
scheme could affect the stability of the banking
system or depositor confidence; whereas Member
States should therefore lay down rules to
limit such references;
Whereas, in specific cases, in certain Member
States in which there are no deposit-guarantee
schemes for certain classes of credit institutions
which take only an extremely small proportion
of deposits, the introduction of such a system
may in some cases take longer than the time
laid down for the transposition of this Directive;
whereas in such cases a transitional derogation
from the requirement to belong to a deposit-guarantee
scheme may be justified; whereas, however,
should such credit institutions operate abroad,
a Member State would be entitled to require
their participation in a deposit-guarantee
scheme which it had set up;
Whereas it is not indispensable, in this Directive,
to harmonize the methods of financing schemes
guaranteeing deposits or credit institutions
themselves, given, on the one hand, that the
cost of financing such schemes must be borne,
in principle, by credit institutions themselves
and, on the other hand, that the financing
capacity of such schemes must be in proportion
to their liabilities; whereas this must not,
however, jeopardize the stability of the banking
system of the Member State concerned;
Whereas this Directive may not result in the
Member States' or their competent authorities'
being made liable in respect of depositors
if they have ensured that one or more schemes
guaranteeing deposits or credit institutions
themselves and ensuring the compensation or
protection of depositors under the conditions
prescribed in this Directive have been introduced
and officially recognized;
Whereas deposit protection is an essential
element in the completion of the internal
market and an indispensable supplement to
the system of supervision of credit institutions
on account of the solidarity it creates amongst
all the institutions in a given financial
market in the event of the failure of any
of them,
HAS ADOPTED THIS DIRECTIVE:
Article 1
For the purposes of this Directive:
1. 'deposit' shall mean any credit balance
which results from funds left in an account
or from temporary situations deriving from
normal banking transactions and which a credit
institution must repay under the legal and
contractual conditions applicable, and any
debt evidenced by a certificate issued by
a credit institution.
Shares in United Kingdom and Irish building
societies apart from those of a capital nature
covered in Article 2 shall be treated as deposits.
Bonds which satisfy the conditions prescribed
in Article 22 (4) of Council Directive 85/611/EEC
of 20 December 1985 on the coordination of
laws, regulations and administrative provisions
relating to undertakings for collective investment
in transferable securities (Ucits) (1) shall
not be considered deposits.
For the purpose of calculating a credit balance,
Member States shall apply the rules and regulations
relating to set-off and counterclaims according
to the legal and contractual conditions applicable
to a deposit;
2. 'joint account' shall mean an account opened
in the names of two or more persons or over
which two or more persons have rights that
may operate against the signature of one or
more of those persons;
3. 'unavailable deposit' shall mean a deposit
that is due and payable but has not been paid
by a credit institution under the legal and
contractual conditions applicable thereto,
where either:
(i) the relevant competent authorities have
determined that in their view the credit institution
concerned appears to be unable for the time
being, for reasons which are directly related
to its financial circumstances, to repay the
deposit and to have no current prospect of
being able to do so.
The competent authorities shall make that
determination as soon as possible and at the
latest 21 days after first becoming satisfied
that a credit institution has failed to repay
deposits which are due and payable; or (ii)
a judicial authority has made a ruling for
reasons which are directly related to the
credit institution's financial circumstances
which has the effect of suspending depositors'
ability to make claims against it, should
that occur before the aforementioned determination
has been made;
4. 'credit institution' shall mean an undertaking
the business of which is to receive deposits
or other repayable funds from the public and
to grant credits for its own account;
5. 'branch' shall mean a place of business
which forms a legally dependent part of a
credit institution and which conducts directly
all or some of the operations inherent in
the business of credit institutions; any number
of branches set up in the same Member State
by a credit institution which has its head
office in another Member State shall be regarded
as a single branch.
Article 2
The following shall be excluded from
any repayment by guarantee schemes:
- subject to Article 8 (3), deposits made
by other credit institutions on their own
behalf and for their own account,
- all instruments which would fall within
the definition of 'own funds' in Article 2
of Council Directive 89/299/EEC of 17 April
1989 on the own funds of credit institutions
(1),
- deposits arising out of transactions in
connection with which there has been a criminal
conviction for money laundering as defined
in Article 1 of Council Directive 91/308/EEC
of 10 June 1991 on prevention of the use of
the financial system for the purpose of money
laundering (2).
Article 3
1. Each Member State shall ensure
that within its territory one or more deposit-guarantee
schemes are introduced and officially recognized.
Except in the circumstances envisaged in the
second subparagraph and in paragraph 4, no
credit institution authorized in that Member
State pursuant to Article 3 of Directive 77/780/EEC
may take deposits unless it is a member of
such a scheme.
A Member State may, however, exempt a credit
institution from the obligation to belong
to a deposit-guarantee scheme where that credit
institution belongs to a system which protects
the credit institution itself and in particular
ensures its liquidity and solvency, thus guaranteeing
protection for depositors at least equivalent
to that provided by a deposit-guarantee scheme,
and which, in the opinion of the competent
authorities, fulfils the following conditions:
- the system must be in existence and have
been officially recognized when this Directive
is adopted,
- the system must be designed to prevent deposits
with credit institutions belonging to the
system from becoming unavailable and have
the resources necessary for that purpose at
its disposal,
- the system must not consist of a guarantee
granted to a credit institution by a Member
State itself or by any of its local or regional
authorities,
- the system must ensure that depositors are
informed in accordance with the terms and
conditions laid down in Article 9.
Those Member States which make use of this
option shall inform the Commission accordingly;
in particular, they shall notify the Commission
of the characteristics of any such protective
systems and the credit institutions covered
by them and of any subsequent changes in the
information supplied. The Commission shall
inform the Banking Advisory Committee thereof.
2. If a credit institution does not comply
with the obligations incumbent on it as a
member of a deposit-guarantee scheme, the
competent authorities which issued its authorization
shall be notified and, in collaboration with
the guarantee scheme, shall take all appropriate
measures including the imposition of sanctions
to ensure that the credit institution complies
with its obligations.
3. If those measures fail to secure compliance
on the part of the credit institution, the
scheme may, where national law permits the
exclusion of a member, with the express consent
of the competent authorities, give not less
than 12 months' notice of its intention of
excluding the credit institution from membership
of the scheme. Deposits made before the expiry
of the notice period shall continue to be
fully covered by the scheme. If, on the expiry
of the notice period, the credit institution
has not complied with its obligations, the
guarantee scheme may, again having obtained
the express consent of the competent authorities,
proceed to exclusion.
4. Where national law permits, and with the
express consent of the competent authorities
which issued its authorization, a credit institution
excluded from a deposit-guarantee scheme may
continue to take deposits if, before its exclusion,
it has made alternative guarantee arrangements
which ensure that depositors will enjoy a
level and scope of protection at least equivalent
to that offered by the officially recognized
scheme.
5. If a credit institution the exclusion of
which is proposed under paragraph 3 is unable
to make alternative arrangements which comply
with the conditions prescribed in paragraph
4, then the competent authorities which issued
its authorization shall revoke it forthwith.
Article 4
1. Deposit-guarantee schemes introduced
and officially recognized in a Member State
in accordance with Article 3 (1) shall cover
the depositors at branches set up by credit
institutions in other Member States.
Until 31 December 1999 neither the level nor
the scope, including the percentage, of cover
provided shall exceed the maximum level or
scope of cover offered by the corresponding
guarantee scheme within the territory of the
host Member State.
Before that date, the Commission shall draw
up a report on the basis of the experience
acquired in applying the second subparagraph
and shall consider the need to continue those
arrangements. If appropriate, the Commission
shall submit a proposal for a Directive to
the European Parliament and the Council, with
a view to the extension of their validity.
2. Where the level and/or scope, including
the percentage, of cover offered by the host
Member State guarantee scheme exceeds the
level and/or scope of cover provided in the
Member State in which a credit institution
is authorized, the host Member State shall
ensure that there is an officially recognized
deposit-guarantee scheme within its territory
which a branch may join voluntarily in order
to supplement the guarantee which its depositors
already enjoy by virtue of its membership
of its home Member State scheme.
The scheme to be joined by the branch shall
cover the category of institution to which
it belongs or most closely corresponds in
the host Member State.
3. Member States shall ensure that objective
and generally applied conditions are established
for branches' membership of a host Member
State's scheme in accordance with paragraph
2. Admission shall be conditional on fulfilment
of the relevant obligations of membership,
including in particular payment of any contributions
and other charges. Member States shall follow
the guiding principles set out in Annex II
in implementing this paragraph.
4. If a branch granted voluntary membership
under paragraph 2 does not comply with the
obligations incumbent on it as a member of
a deposit-guarantee scheme, the competent
authorities which issued the authorization
shall be notified and, in collaboration with
the guarantee scheme, shall take all appropriate
measures to ensure that the aforementioned
obligations are complied with.
If those measures fail to secure the branch's
compliance with the aforementioned obligations,
after an appropriate period of notice of not
less than 12 months the guarantee scheme may,
with the consent of the competent authorities
which issued the authorization, exclude the
branch. Deposits made before the date of exclusion
shall continue to be covered by the voluntary
scheme until the dates on which they fall
due. Depositors shall be informed of the withdrawal
of the supplementary cover.
5. The Commission shall report on the operation
of paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 no later than 31
December 1999 and shall, if appropriate, propose
amendments thereto.
Article 5
Deposits held when the authorization
of a credit institution authorized pursuant
to Article 3 of Directive 77/780/EEC is withdrawn
shall continue to be covered by the guarantee
scheme.
Article 6
1. Member States shall check that
branches established by a credit institution
which has its head office outwith the Community
have cover equivalent to that prescribed in
this Directive.
Failing that, Member States may, subject to
Article 9 (1) of Directive 77/780/EEC, stipulate
that branches established by a credit institution
which has its head office outwith the Community
must join deposit-guarantee schemes in operation
within their territories.
2. Actual and intending depositors at branches
established by a credit institution which
has its head office outwith the Community
shall be provided by the credit institution
with all relevant information concerning the
guarantee arrangements which cover their deposits.
3. The information referred to in paragraph
2 shall be made available in the official
language or languages of the Member State
in which a branch is established in the manner
prescribed by national law and shall be drafted
in a clear and comprehensible form.
Article 7
1. Deposit-guarantee schemes shall
stipulate that the aggregate deposits of each
depositor must be covered up to ECU 20 000
in the event of deposits' being unavailable.
Until 31 December 1999 Member States in which,
when this Directive is adopted, deposits are
not covered up to ECU 20 000 may retain the
maximum amount laid down in their guarantee
schemes, provided that this amount is not
less than ECU 15 000.
2. Member States may provide that certain
depositors or deposits shall be excluded from
guarantee or shall be granted a lower level
of guarantee. Those exclusions are listed
in Annex I.
3. This Article shall not preclude the retention
or adoption of provisions which offer a higher
or more comprehensive cover for deposits.
In particular, deposit-guarantee schemes may,
on social considerations, cover certain kinds
of deposits in full.
4. Member States may limit the guarantee provided
for in paragraph 1 or that referred to in
paragraph 3 to a specified percentage of deposits.
The percentage guaranteed must, however, be
equal to or exceed 90 % of aggregate deposits
until the amount to be paid under the guarantee
reaches the amount referred to in paragraph
1.
5. The amount referred to in paragraph 1 shall
be reviewed periodically by the Commission
at least once every five years. If appropriate,
the Commission shall submit to the European
Parliament and to the Council a proposal for
a Directive to adjust the amount referred
to in paragraph 1, taking account in particular
of developments in the banking sector and
the economic and monetary situation in the
Community. The first review shall not take
place until five years after the end of the
period referred to in Article 7 (1), second
subparagraph.
6. Member States shall ensure that the depositor's
rights to compensation may be the subject
of an action by the depositor against the
deposit-guarantee scheme.
Article 8
1. The limits referred to in Article
7 (1), (3) and (4) shall apply to the aggregate
deposits placed with the same credit institution
irrespective of the number of deposits, the
currency and the location within the Community.
2. The share of each depositor in a joint
account shall be taken into account in calculating
the limits provided for in Article 7 (1),
(3) and (4).
In the absence of special provisions, such
an account shall be divided equally amongst
the depositors.
Member States may provide that deposits in
an account to which two or more persons are
entitled as members of a business partnership,
association or grouping of a similar nature,
without legal personality, may be aggregated
and treated as if made by a single depositor
for the purpose of calculating the limits
provided for in Article 7 (1), (3) and (4).
3. Where the depositor is not absolutely entitled
to the sums held in an account, the person
who is absolutely entitled shall be covered
by the guarantee, provided that that person
has been identified or is identifiable before
the date on which the competent authorities
make the determination described in Article
1 (3) (i) or the judicial authority makes
the ruling described in Article 1 (3) (ii).
If there are several persons who are absolutely
entitled, the share of each under the arrangements
subject to which the sums are managed shall
be taken into account when the limits provided
for in Article 7 (1), (3) and (4) are calculated.
This provision shall not apply to collective
investment undertakings.
Article 9
1. Member States shall ensure that
credit institutions make available to actual
and intending depositors the information necessary
for the identification of the deposit-guarantee
scheme of which the institution and its branches
are members within the Community or any alternative
arrangement provided for in Article 3 (1),
second subparagraph, or Article 3 (4). The
depositors shall be informed of the provisions
of the deposit-guarantee scheme or any alternative
arrangement applicable, including the amount
and scope of the cover offered by the guarantee
scheme. That information shall be made available
in a readily comprehensible manner.
Information shall also be given on request
on the conditions for compensation and the
formalities which must be completed to obtain
compensation.
2. The information provided for in paragraph
1 shall be made available in the manner prescribed
by national law in the official language or
languages of the Member State in which the
branch is established.
3. Member States shall establish rules limiting
the use in advertising of the information
referred to in paragraph 1 in order to prevent
such use from affecting the stability of the
banking system or depositor confidence. In
particular, Member States may restrict such
advertising to a factual reference to the
scheme to which a credit institution belongs.
Article 10
1. Deposit-guarantee schemes shall
be in a position to pay duly verified claims
by depositors in respect of unavailable deposits
within three months of the date on which the
competent authorities make the determination
described in Article 1 (3) (i) or the judicial
authority makes the ruling described in Article
1 (3) (ii).
2. In wholly exceptional circumstances and
in special cases a guarantee scheme may apply
to the competent authorities for an extension
of the time limit. No such extension shall
exceed three months. The competent authorities
may, at the request of the guarantee scheme,
grant no more than two further extensions,
neither of which shall exceed three months.
3. The time limit laid down in paragraphs
1 and 2 may not be invoked by a guarantee
scheme in order to deny the benefit of guarantee
to any depositor who has been unable to assert
his claim to payment under a guarantee in
time.
4. The documents relating to the conditions
to be fulfilled and the formalities to be
completed to be eligible for a payment under
the guarantee referred to in paragraph 1 shall
be drawn up in detail in the manner prescribed
by national law in the official language or
languages of the Member State in which the
guaranteed deposit is located.
5. Notwithstanding the time limit laid down
in paragraphs 1 and 2, where a depositor or
any person entitled to or interested in sums
held in an account has been charged with an
offence arising out of or in relation to money
laundering as defined in Article 1 of Directive
91/308/EEC, the guarantee scheme may suspend
any payment pending the judgment of the court.
Article 11
Without prejudice to any other rights
which they may have under national law, schemes
which make payments under guarantee shall
have the right of subrogation to the rights
of depositors in liquidation proceedings for
an amount equal to their payments.
Article 12
Notwithstanding Article 3, those institutions
authorized in Spain or in Greece and listed
in Annex III shall be exempt from the requirement
to belong to a deposit-guarantee scheme until
31 December 1999.
Such credit institutions shall expressly alert
their actual and intending depositors to the
fact that they are not members of any deposit-guarantee
scheme.
During that time, should any such credit institution
establish or have established a branch in
another Member State, that Member State may
require that branch to belong to a deposit-guarantee
scheme set up within its territory under conditions
consonant with those prescribed in Article
4 (2), (3) and (4).
Article 13
In the list of authorized credit institutions
which it is required to draw up pursuant to
Article 3 (7) of Directive 77/780/EEC the
Commission shall indicate the status of each
credit institution with regard to this Directive.
Article 14
1. The Member States shall bring into
force the laws, regulations and administrative
provisions necessary for them to comply with
this Directive by 1 July 1995. They shall
forthwith inform the Commission thereof.
When the Member States adopt these measures
they shall contain a reference to this Directive
or shall be accompanied by such reference
on the occasion of their official publication.
The methods of making such reference shall
be laid down by the Member States.
2. The Member States shall communicate to
the Commission the texts of the main provisions
of national law which they adopt in the field
governed by this Directive.
Article 15
This Directive shall enter into force
on the day of its publication in the Official
Journal of the European Communities.
Article 16
This Directive is addressed to the
Member States.
Done at Brussels, 30 May 1994.
For the European Parliament The President
E. KLEPSCH For the Council The President G.
ROMEOS
(1) OJ No C 163, 30. 6. 1992, p. 6 and OJ
No C 178, 30. 6. 1993, p. 14.
(2) OJ No C 332, 16. 12. 1992, p. 13.
(3) OJ No C 115, 26. 4. 1993, p. 96 and Decision
of the European Parliament of 9 March 1994
(OJ No C 91, 28. 3. 1994).
(4) OJ No L 33, 4. 2. 1987, p. 16.
(5) OJ No L 386, 30. 12. 1989, p. 1. Directive
as amended by Directive 92/30/EEC (OJ No L
110, 28. 4. 1992, p. 52).
(1) OJ No L 322, 17. 12. 1977, p. 30. Directive
as last amended by Directive 89/646/EEC (OJ
No L 386, 30. 12. 1989, p. 1).
(1) OJ No L 375, 31. 12. 1985, p. 3. Directive
as last amended by Directive 88/220/EEC (OJ
No L 100, 19. 4. 1988, p. 31.).
(1) OJ No L 124, 5. 5. 1989, p. 16. Directive
is last amended by Directive 92/16/EEC (OJ
No L 75, 21. 3. 1992, p. 48).
(2) OJ No L 166, 28. 6. 1991, p. 77.

ANNEX I
List of exclusions referred to in Article
7 (2)
1. Deposits by financial institutions as defined
in Article 1 (6) of Directive 89/646/EEC.
2. Deposits by insurance undertakings.
3. Deposits by government and central administrative
authorities.
4. Deposits by provincial, regional, local
and municipal authorities.
5. Deposits by collective investment undertakings.
6. Deposits by pension and retirement funds.
7. Deposits by a credit institution's own
directors, managers, members personally liable,
holders of at least 5 % of the credit institution's
capital, persons responsible for carrying
out the statutory audits of the credit institution's
accounting documents and depositors of similar
status in other companies in the same group.
8. Deposits by close relatives and third parties
acting on behalf of the depositors referred
to in 7.
9. Deposits by other companies in the same
group.
10. Non-nominative deposits.
11. Deposits for which the depositor has,
on an individual basis, obtained from the
same credit institution rates and financial
concessions which have helped to aggravate
its financial situation.
12. Debt securities issued by the same institution
and liabilities arising out of own acceptances
and promissory notes.
13. Deposits in currencies other than:
- those of the Member States,
- ecus.
14. Deposits by companies which are of such
a size that they are not permitted to draw
up abridged balance sheets pursuant to Article
11 of the Fourth Council Directive (78/660/EEC)
of 25 July 1978 based on Article 54 (3) (g)
of the Treaty on the annual accounts of certain
types of companies (1).
(1) OJ No L 222, 14. 8. 1978, p. 11. Directive
as last amended by Directive 90/605/EEC (OJ
No L 317, 16. 11. 1990, p. 60).
ANNEX II
Guiding principles
Where a branch applies to join a host Member
State scheme for supplementary cover, the
host Member State scheme will bilaterally
establish with the home Member State scheme
appropriate rules and procedures for paying
compensation to depositors at that branch.
The following principles shall apply both
to the drawing up of those procedures and
in the framing of the membership conditions
applicable to such a branch (as referred to
in Article 4 (2)):
(a) the host Member State scheme will retain
full rights to impose its objective and generally
applied rules on participating credit institutions;
it will be able to require the provision of
relevant information and have the right to
verify such information with the home Member
State's competent authorities;
(b) the host Member State scheme will meet
claims for supplementary compensation upon
a declaration from the home Member State's
competent authorities that deposits are unavailable.
The host Member State scheme will retain full
rights to verify a depositor's entitlement
according to its own standards and procedures
before paying supplementary compensation;
(c) home Member State and host Member State
schemes will cooperate fully with each other
to ensure that depositors receive compensation
promptly and in the correct amounts. In particular,
they will agree on how the existence of a
counterclaim which may give rise to set-off
under either scheme will affect the compensation
paid to the depositor by each scheme;
(d) host Member State schemes will be entitled
to charge branches for supplementary cover
on an appropriate basis which takes into account
the guarantee funded by the home Member State
scheme. To facilitate charging, the host Member
State scheme will be entitled to assume that
its liability will in all circumstances be
limited to the excess of the guarantee it
has offered over the guarantee offered by
the home Member State regardless of whether
the home Member State actually pays any compensation
in respect of deposits held within the host
Member State's territory.
ANNEX III
List of credit institutions mentioned in Article
12
(a) Specialized classes of Spanish institutions,
the legal status of which is currently undergoing
reform, authorized as - Entidades de Financiación
o Factoring,
- Sociedades de Arrendamiento Financiero,
- Sociedades de Crédito Hipotecario.
(b) The following Spanish state institutions:
- Banco de Crédito Agrícola, SA,
- Banco Hipotecario de España, SA,
- Banco de Crédito Local, SA.
(c) The following Greek credit cooperatives:
- Lamia Credit Cooperative,
- Ioannina Credit Cooperative,
- Xylocastron Credit Cooperative,
as well as those of the credit cooperatives
of a similar nature listed below which are
authorized or in the process of being authorized
on the date of the adoption of this Directive:
- Chania Credit Cooperative,
- Iraklion Credit Cooperative,
- Magnissia Credit Cooperative,
- Larissa Credit Cooperative,
- Patras Credit Cooperative,
- Thessaloniki Credit Cooperative.
