Back to list
🇪🇺European Central BankMay 7, 2026
Euro area financial integration improves despite persistent fragmentation, ECB report shows
ECB 보고서: 유로존 금융 통합, 지속적인 분절화에도 개선
Summary
유럽중앙은행(ECB)은 2026년 5월 7일 발표한 보고서에서 2022년 말 이후 유로존 금융 통합이 강화되었다고 밝혔다. 자산 가격 분산 감소와 국경 간 활동 증가에 힘입어 채권 시장 및 은행 간 대출 시장에서 위험 공유와 회복탄력성이 특히 개선되었다. 그러나 보고서는 유로존 금융 시스템이 장기 성장, 혁신 및 경쟁력 지원 잠재력에 미치지 못하고 있으며, 특히 2022년 이후 주식 시장 통합이 약화되었다고 지적했다. 이는 국경 간 주식 투자 정체와 역내 외국인 직접 투자 감소에 기인하며, 지속적인 자국 편향과 분절화가 혁신 기업에 대한 위험 자본 공급을 제한하고 있다. ECB는 유로존 금융 부문의 경쟁력 강화를 위해 단일 시장 내 통합, 규모 및 효율성 증진이 필요하다고 강조하며, 유럽연합 집행위원회의 저축 및 투자 연합 목표를 지지했다.
▶Show full text4,563 chars
PRESS RELEASEEuro area financial integration improves despite persistent fragmentation, ECB report shows 7 May 2026Financial integration in the euro area has strengthened since late 2022, supported by lower dispersion in euro area asset prices across markets Cross‑border activity has increased, supporting risk sharing and resilience, notably in debt markets and interbank lendingEquity market integration is declining, weighing on investment and competitivenessFinancial integration in the euro area has improved markedly since late 2022, reflecting resilient market functioning and progress across bond, equity and banking markets, according to the European Central Bank (ECB)’s latest report on Financial integration and structure in the euro area, published today.Price‑based and quantity‑based indicators of financial integration have risen to levels above their historical averages, underpinned by a sustained decline in redenomination risk premia and supported by EU‑level policy initiatives such as the Next Generation EU programme. Cross‑border activity has increased across market segments, facilitating greater risk sharing and helping make the euro area financial system more resilient.Financial integration has strengthened most visibly in debt markets and interbank lending. Cross‑border holdings of debt securities, including sovereign bonds, have increased, supported by better fundamentals across countries and the normalisation of the Eurosystem balance sheet. Interbank lending has become more active as excess liquidity has been redistributed, signalling a more integrated and less fragmented money market environment.The growing role of non‑bank financial institutions has further diversified financing channels and increased cross‑border risk sharing. Overall, indicators of consumption risk sharing suggest that the euro area has become more resilient to economic shocks, supporting smoother adjustment across countries.At the same time, the report shows that the euro area’s financial system continues to fall short of its potential to support long‑term growth, innovation and competitiveness. External financing has remained subdued amid high interest rates and weak investment sentiment, while structural fragmentation continues to constrain equity market integration and the efficient allocation of savings across borders.Equity market integration has declined since 2022. Cross‑border equity investment within the euro area is stagnating and intra‑euro area foreign direct investment has fallen to historically low levels. Euro area households continue to hold a large share of their savings in low‑yielding deposits, while a significant portion of equity investment is channelled outside the EU.This persistent home bias and fragmentation contribute to a mismatch between the euro area’s high level of savings and its investment needs, limiting the availability of risk capital for innovative firms and weighing on long‑term competitiveness.The report underlines that advancing integration, scale and efficiency across the single market is needed to improve the competitiveness of the euro area’s financial sector, including its banking sector.The findings support the objectives of the European Commission’s savings and investments union, which aims to channel Europe’s abundant savings more effectively into productive investment by creating a more integrated and effective single market for financial services.The analysis adds to the one presented in the recently published Eurosystem response to the EU Commission’s targeted consultation on the competitiveness of the EU banking sector.ECB staff will present the report on Financial integration and structure in the euro area at the high-level conference on European financial integration on 7 May 2026.For media queries, please contact Esther Tejedor, tel.: +49 172 5171280.NotesThe ECB’s biennial Financial integration and structure in the euro area report focuses on financial integration and selected policy issues, notably the European banking union and capital markets union. The report contributes to the debate on how to deepen European Economic and Monetary Union.Indicators of financial integration in the euro area are available in the Statistical Annex and the underlying Financial Integration or Financial Structure indicators. CONTACT European Central Bank Directorate General Communications Sonnemannstrasse 20 60314 Frankfurt am Main, Germany +49 69 1344 7455 media@ecb.europa.eu Reproduction is permitted provided that the source is acknowledged. Media contacts