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TARGET2

TARGET2 (Trans-European Automated Real-time Gross Settlement Express Transfer System) is the real-time gross settlement (RTGS) system for the Eurozone, and is available to non-Eurozone countries. It was developed by and is owned by the Eurosystem. TARGET2 is based on an integrated central technical infrastructure, called the Single Shared Platform (SSP).[1] SSP is operated by three providing central banks: France (Banque de France), Germany (Deutsche Bundesbank) and Italy (Banca d'Italia). TARGET2 started to replace TARGET in November 2007.

TARGET2 is also an interbank RTGS payment system for the clearing of cross-border transfers in the eurozone. Participants in the system are either direct or indirect. Direct participants hold an RTGS account and have access to real-time information and control tools. They are responsible for all payments sent from or received on their accounts by themselves or any indirect participants operating through them. Indirect participation means that payment orders are always sent to and received from the system via a direct participant, with only the relevant direct participant having a legal relationship with the Eurosystem. Finally, bank branches and subsidiaries can choose to participate in TARGET2 as multi-addressee access or addressable BICs.

The Eurosystem in March 2023 switched its real-time gross settlement from TARGET2 to T2, which follows ISO 20022. The switch involves transactions for settling payments related to the Eurosystem's monetary policy operations, as well as bank‑to‑bank and commercial transactions. TARGET2 previously handled transactions for over €2.2 trillion per day.[2]

History edit

Since the establishment of the European Economic Community in 1958, there has been movement towards an integrated European financial market. This movement has been marked by several events: In the field of payments, the most visible were the launch of the euro in 1999 and the cash changeover in the euro area countries in 2002. The establishment of the large-value central bank payment system TARGET was less visible, but also of great importance. It formed an integral part of the introduction of the euro and facilitated the rapid integration of the euro area money market.

The implementation of TARGET2 was based on a decision of the ECB Council of autumn 2002. TARGET2 started operations on 19 November 2007, when the first group of countries (Austria, Cyprus, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta and Slovenia) migrated to the SSP. This first migration was successful and confirmed the reliability of SSP. After this initial migration, TARGET2 already settled around 50% of overall traffic in terms of volume and 30% in terms of value.

On 18 February 2008, the second migration successfully migrated to TARGET2, comprising Belgium, Finland, France, Ireland, the Netherlands, Portugal and Spain.

On 19 May 2008, the final group migrated to TARGET2, comprising Denmark, Estonia, Greece, Italy, Poland and the ECB. The six-month migration process went smoothly and did not cause any operational disruptions.

Slovakia joined TARGET2 on 1 January 2009, Bulgaria joined in February 2010, Romania on 4 July 2011, and Croatia in February 2016.

Objectives edit

The objectives of TARGET2 are to:

  • support the implementation of the Eurosystem's monetary policy and the functioning of the euro money market
  • minimise systemic risk in the payments market
  • increase the efficiency of cross-border payments in euro, and
  • maintain the integration and stability of the Eurozone money market.

Participation edit

The use of TARGET2 is mandatory for the settlement of any euro operations involving the Eurosystem. The Eurosystem consists of the European Central Bank (ECB) and the national central banks of the 19 European Union member states that are part of the Eurozone.[3] Participation in TARGET2 is mandatory for new member states joining the Eurozone.

TARGET2 services in euro are available to non-Eurozone states. National central banks of states which have not yet adopted the euro can also participate in TARGET2 to facilitate the settlement of transactions in euro. Central banks from four non-Eurozone states Bulgaria, Denmark, Poland and Romania also participate in TARGET2.

In 2012, TARGET2 had 999 direct participants, 3,386 indirect participants and 13,313 correspondents.

Activity edit

TARGET2 is the real-time gross settlement (RTGS) system with payment transactions being settled one by one on a continuous basis in central bank money with immediate finality. There is no upper or lower limit on the value of payments. TARGET2 mainly settles operations of monetary policy and money market operations. TARGET2 has to be used for all payments involving the Eurosystem, as well as for the settlement of operations of all large-value net settlement systems and securities settlement systems handling the euro. TARGET2 is operated on a single technical platform. The business relationships are established between the TARGET2 users and their national central bank. In terms of the value processed, TARGET2 is one of the largest payment systems in the world.[4]

Single Shared Platform edit

TARGET2 is a harmonised RTGS system covering the Eurozone. It operates on the Single Shared Platform (SSP), which replaced the decentralised first-generation TARGET system. It was designed to provide an enhanced service with benefits for economies of scale which allows it to charge lower fees and offer cost-efficiency. All participants of the Eurosystem, and outside it, can access the same functionalities and interfaces, as well as a single price structure. SWIFT standards and services (i.e. FIN, InterAct, FileAct and Browse) are used in the harmonised communication between the system and its participants.

SSP has adopted a modular approach, with each module being closely related to a specific service. The Payments Module, for example, is used for the processing of payments. Some modules (i.e., the Home Accounting Module, the Standing Facilities Module and the Reserve Management Module) can be used by individual central banks on an optional basis. Central banks which do not use particular modules set up other applications within their own internal technical environments to perform such functions.

Before the introduction of TARGET2, some central banks held "home accounts" (also called "proprietary home accounting systems") outside their RTGS systems. These were used primarily to manage minimum reserves, standing facilities and cash withdrawals, but also to settle ancillary systems' transactions.

It was agreed that, in the context of the new system, these types of transaction should ultimately be settled on the RTGS accounts held on the SSP. However, some countries' domestic arrangements did not allow these operations to be moved rapidly to the SSP. As a result, the Eurosystem agreed on a maximum transition period of four years for moving the settlement of these payments to the SSP.

The Information and Control Module (ICM) allows direct users to access information and manage parameters linked to balances and payments online. Via the ICM, users have access to the Payments Module and the Static Data Management function. Users of the ICM are able to choose what information they receive and when. Urgent messages (e.g. system broadcasts from central banks and warnings concerning payments with a debit time indicator) are automatically displayed on the screen.

TARGET2 provides settlement services for a wide range of ancillary systems. While each of these used to have its own settlement procedure, TARGET2 now offers six generic procedures for the settlement of ancillary systems and allows these systems to access any account on the SSP via a standardised interface.

Statistics edit

In 2012, TARGET2:

  • settled the cash positions of 82 ancillary systems,
  • processed a daily average of 354,185 payments, representing a daily average value of €2,477 billion,
  • the average value of a TARGET2 transaction was €7.1 million,
  • two-thirds of all TARGET2 payments (i.e., 68%) had a value of less than €50,000 each; 11% of all payments had value of over €1 million each,
  • the peak in volume turnover was 29 June 2012 with 536,524 transactions and peak value turnover was on 1 March 2012 with €3,718 billion,
  • TARGET2's share in total large-value payment system traffic in euro was 92% in value terms and 58% in volume terms,
  • the SSP technical availability was 100%, and
  • 99.94% of TARGET2 payments were processed in less than five minutes.[5]

Liquidity management edit

The availability and cost of liquidity are two crucial issues for the smooth processing of payments in RTGS systems. In TARGET2, liquidity can be managed very flexibly and is available at low-cost since fully remunerated minimum reserves – which credit institutions are required to hold with their central bank – can be used in full for settlement purposes during the day. The averaging provisions applied to minimum reserves allow banks to be flexible in their end-of-day liquidity management. The overnight lending and deposit facilities also allow for continuous liquidity management decisions. The Eurosystem provides intraday credit. This credit must be fully collateralised and no interest is charged. However, all Eurosystem credit must be fully collateralised, i.e. secured by other assets. The range of eligible collateral is very wide. Assets eligible for monetary policy purposes are also eligible for intraday credit. Under Eurosystem rules, credit can only be granted by the national central bank of the member state where the participant is established. Banks' treasury managers have a keen interest in the use of automated processes for the optimisation of payment and liquidity management. They need tools that will allow them to track activity across accounts and, where possible, make accurate intraday and overnight funding decisions from a single location – e.g. their head office. TARGET2 users have, via the Information and Control Module, access to comprehensive online information and easy-to-use liquidity management features that meet their business needs.

TARGET2 has a range of features allowing efficient liquidity management, including payment priorities, timed transactions, liquidity reservation facilities, limits, liquidity pooling and optimisation procedures.

Access criteria edit

The access criteria for TARGET2 aim to allow broad levels of participation by institutions involved in clearing and settlement activities. Supervision by a competent authority ensures the soundness of such institutions. Supervised credit institutions established within the European Economic Area are the primary participants. Supervised investment firms, clearing and settlement organisations which are subject to oversight and government treasuries can also be admitted as participants.

Pricing edit

There are two pricing schemes:[6]

  • Recurring fixed charges and a fixed transaction fee:
    • Monthly fixed charge: €100.00
    • Single transaction price: €0.80
  • Recurring fixed charge and a variable transaction fee based on number of transactions:
    • Monthly fixed charge: €1,250.00
    • Variable transaction price: volume-based between €0.125 and €0.60

Holidays edit

The TARGET2 system is closed on Saturdays and Sundays and on the following public holidays in all participating countries: 1 January, Good Friday and Easter Monday (according to the calendar used by Western Christianity), 1 May, 25 December and 26 December.[7][8]

Operations edit

Outages edit

In October 2020, the system and TARGET2 Securities experienced an almost-11-hour outage, attributed to a "software glitch in a third-party network device" by the ECB, per a report. Much shorter service interruptions of different sorts have hit Target2 in July 2019, November 2018 and December 2017, and in October 2020 Euronext NV, a stock market on the continent, also experienced some outages, per the report.[9]

Intra-system credit facilities edit

[needs update]

 
TARGET2 balances of selected countries of Euro system starting 2001

Starting during the financial crisis of 2007-2008 and European debt crisis of ensuing years, the main subjects of criticism were the unlimited credit facilities made available since the establishment of the TARGET system by the national central banks of the Eurosystem on the one hand and by the ECB on the other.

The issue of the increasing TARGET balances was brought to public attention for the first time in early 2011 by Hans-Werner Sinn, president of the Munich-based Ifo Institute for Economic Research. In an article in Wirtschaftswoche, he drew attention to the enormous increase in TARGET claims held by Germany's Bundesbank, from €5 billion at the end of 2006 to €326 billion at the end of 2010, and to the attendant liability risk.[10] In the German daily Süddeutsche Zeitung he put the entire volume of the TARGET liabilities of Greece, Ireland, Portugal, and Spain at €340 billion at the end of February 2011. Moreover, he pointed out that if these countries should exit the Eurozone and declare insolvency, Germany's liability risk would amount to 33% of that sum, or €114 billion, relating these sums to the other rescue facilities of euro countries and the International Monetary Fund. Before he made them public, TARGET deficits or surpluses were not the subject of major public attention even though they were disclosed by Eurosystem central banks.[11]

Shortly thereafter, Sinn interpreted the TARGET balances for the first time within the context of current account deficits, international private capital movements and the international shifting of the refinancing credit that the national central banks of the Eurosystem grant to the commercial banks in their jurisdiction. He proved that the ECB system compensated the interruption and reversal in capital flows triggered by the financial crisis by shifting refinancing credit among national central banks. The increase in TARGET liabilities is a direct measure of net payment orders across borders, i.e. of the portion of the current account deficit that is not counterbalanced by capital imports, or, equivalently, the sum of the current account deficit and net capital exports. Indirectly, they also measure a country's amount of central bank money created and lent out beyond what is needed for domestic circulation. Since every country needs a relatively steady amount of central bank money for its domestic transactions, payment orders to other countries, which reduce the domestic stock of money, must be offset by a continuous issuing of new refinancing credit, i.e., the creation of new central bank money. Similarly, the increase in money balances in the country whose central bank honours the payment orders reduces the demand for fresh refinancing credit. Hence, a country's TARGET liabilities also indicate the extent to which its central bank has replaced the capital markets to finance its current account deficit, as well as any possible capital flight, by creating new central bank money through corresponding refinancing credit. Sinn illustrated that from an economic perspective, TARGET credit and formal rescue facilities serve the same purpose and involve similar liability risks.[12][13] Sinn's presentation on 19 May 2011 at the Munich Economic Summit motivated an op-ed column in the Financial Times. They reconstructed the data on the basis of the balance sheets of the Eurosystem's national central banks and the balance-sheet statistics of the International Monetary Fund.

Later, in June 2011, Hans-Werner Sinn and Timo Wollmershaeuser compiled the first panel database of the Eurozone's TARGET balances.[14][15][16] The authors point out that the additional creation of money by the central banks of the crisis-stricken countries was provided by a lowering of the standards for the collateral that commercial banks have to provide to their national central banks to obtain refinancing credit. Furthermore, they showed that the commercial banks of the Eurozone's core countries used the incoming liquidity to reduce the refinancing credit they drew from their national central bank, even lending the surplus liquidity to this central bank, which implies that the TARGET balances indirectly also measure the reallocation of refinancing credit among the countries of the Eurozone. The authors showed that the national central banks of the northern countries became net debtors to their own banking systems. Sinn and Wollmershaeuser argue that the euro crisis is a balance-of-payments crisis, which in its substance is similar to the Bretton Woods crisis. Moreover, they show the extent to which TARGET credit financed current account deficits or capital flight in Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy. They also show that the current account deficits of Greece and Portugal were financed for years by refinancing credits of their national central banks and the concomitant TARGET credit. They also document the Irish capital flight and the capital flight from Spain and Italy, which began in earnest in summer 2011. Following Sinn,[17] the authors compare the TARGET balances of the Eurosystem with the corresponding balances in the US settlement system (Interdistrict Settlement Account) and point out that US balances relative to US GDP have decreased thanks to a regularly performed settlement procedure in which ownership shares in a common Fed clearing portfolio are reallocated among the various district Feds comprising the US Federal Reserve System. They advocate the establishment of a similar system in Europe to end the ECB's role as a provider of international public credit that undercuts private market conditions.

Hans-Werner Sinn addressed the TARGET balances issue again in a special edition of ifo Schnelldienst and made it the main topic of his book Die Target-Falle ("The Target Trap"), published in early October 2012.[18][19]

A number of economists took a stand on the issue of the TARGET balances in a publication of the Ifo Institute, confirming Sinn's analysis.[20] Financial commentator David Marsh, writing in early 2012, noted that TARGET2 provides "automatic central bank funding for EMU countries suffering capital outflows provided through it" and that the balances would "have to be shared out by central banks throughout the Eurosystem ... if EMU fragments into its constituent parts. So the pressure on Germany is to keep the balances growing, in order to avoid crystallization of losses that would be hugely damaging not just to Berlin but also to central banks and governments in Paris and Rome".[21]

The official reactions to Sinn's research findings were mixed. At first, in February and March 2011, the Bundesbank downplayed the TARGET balances as an irrelevant statistical position.[22][23] However, in early 2012, Bundesbank chief Jens Weidmann wrote a letter to ECB head Mario Draghi on the subject which "found its way into the columns of the conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper. It appeared to suggest more secure collateralisation for the overall ECB credits to weaker EMU central banks, which now amount to more than €800 billion under the ECB's TARGET2 electronic payment system," Marsh noted in a subsequent column.[24]

Jens Ulbrich and Alexander Lipponer (economists at the Bundesbank) justified the policy of the ECB during the European balance-of-payments crisis as follows: In the crisis, the Eurosystem consciously assumed a larger intermediation function in view of the massive disruptions in the interbank market by extending its liquidity control instruments. With this greater role in the provision of central bank money – essentially by changing to a full allotment procedure in refinancing operations and the extension of longer-term refinancing operations – the total volume of refinancing credits provided has increased (temporarily even markedly). At the same time, the quality requirements for the underlying collateral were reduced in the crisis. The higher risk was accepted to maintain the functioning of the financial system under more difficult conditions.[25]

The Ifo Institute's regularly updated "Exposure level indicator" ('Haftungspegel') shows Germany's potential financial burden should the crisis-stricken euro countries exit the currency union and declare insolvency.[26] In another development, the Institute of Empirical Economic Research at the University of Osnabrueck collects and publishes TARGET2 data from all euro countries on the basis of the balance sheets of each central bank.[27]

Nevertheless, there are also some economists who contradict some points of Sinn's analysis. Paul De Grauwe and Yuemei Ji argue that Germany's and other countries' TARGET claims could be made void, without suffering any losses, since the value of the central bank money, being "fiat money", is independent of a central bank's assets.[28] Sinn, in his rejoinder, showed that the TARGET balances represent the shift of refinancing credit to the crisis-stricken countries, representing thus the claim on the interest returns from these countries. Eliminating the TARGET balances would thus entail a real loss of resources amounting to the present value of this interest income, which is reflected exactly by the amount of TARGET claims. This loss would result in a smaller transfer of Bundesbank's revenues to the German budget and, should the situation arise, in the necessity to recapitalise the Bundesbank through increased taxation.[29] Sinn uses the same reasoning in his book Die Target-Falle.[30] Sinn points out that the option of self-rescue for the crisis-affected countries by drawing TARGET credit forces Germany to approve the formal rescue facilities and eventually to accept eurobonds as well. He considers the resulting path dependence in policy-making a "trap". Analysis of TARGET2 balances countering the Ifo conclusions have been advanced by economist Karl Whelan at University College Dublin. In summer 2012, Thomas A. Lubik, a senior economist and research advisor, and Karl Rhodes, a writer, both at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond (Virginia, US), cited Whelan's work and also drew parallels and distinctions between the US Fed and the ECB in analysing the balances. Lubik and Rhodes argued that:

"TARGET2 merely reflects persistent imbalances in current accounts and capital accounts. It does not cause them ... [and does not represent] a 'stealth bailout' of the periphery nations".[31]

Sinn countered that he was misinterpreted in this point insofar as he was just "saying that the current-account deficits were sustained with the extra refinancing credit behind the TARGET balances" and this would "not equate to claiming that current-account deficits and TARGET deficits were positively correlated".[29]

Alexander L. Wolman believes that rising Interdistrict Settlement Account (ISA) balances – the US-equivalent of rising TARGET balances, if there were no yearly rebalancing – would not be a reason for concern in the US, because the borderlines of the Federal Reserve Districts do not follow national, not even state borders. Further, a rising ISA balance of the Federal Reserve District of New York would be regarded as not surprising, as New York is the financial center of the United States. Until 1975 there was no rebalancing between Federal Reserve districts, a fact which did not lead to major discussions.[32]

Finally, in late 2016, after some years of relative improvement but with rising worries over Italy, the level of TARGET2 intra-eurozone balances at the ECB had surpassed 2012's record levels. The claims represented half of the Germany's net foreign assets and were on track shortly to reach €1 trillion if trends continued unchecked.[33]

See also edit

References edit

This article incorporates text from the corresponding German Wikipedia articles on TARGET and TARGET2 as of 4 April 2008.
More text also from the website of the European Central Bank which provides and maintains information on TARGET2 both for the general public as for professional users of TARGET2

  1. ^ "Single Shared Platform: General Functional Specifications: Version 2.1", Europa (web portal).
  2. ^ "Successful launch of new T2 wholesale payment system". European Central Bank. 21 March 2023.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 September 2008. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  4. ^ "TARGET Annual Report 2012" (PDF). Europa (web portal). 2013. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  5. ^ "Target 2" Europa (web portal), 26 January 2017.
  6. ^ . Bundesbank.de. Archived from the original on 23 April 2012. Retrieved 11 June 2016.
  7. ^ "Information guide for TARGET2 users" (PDF). October 2009. p. 13. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  8. ^ (PDF). 26 October 2012. p. 1. Archived from the original on 16 April 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  9. ^ Fairless, Tom, "Europe’s Core Payments Network Disrupted by Technical Malfunction" (subscription required), The Wall Street Journal, 28 October 2020. re: Euronext's 2020 event in WSJ (subscription required). Retrieved 2020-10-28.
  10. ^ Sinn, Hans-Werner, Neue Abgründe, Wirtschaftswoche, No. 8, 21 February 2011, p. 35.
  11. ^ Sinn, Hans-Werner, Tickende Zeitbombe, "Süddeutsche Zeitung", No. 77, 2 April 2011, p. 24.
  12. ^ Sinn, Hans-Werner, Die riskante Kreditersatzpolitik der EZB, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, No. 103, 4 May 2011, p. 10.
  13. ^ Sinn, Hans-Werner, Target-Salden, Außenhandel und Geldschöpfung, ifo Schnelldienst 64, No. 9, 2011.
  14. ^ Sinn, H. W.; Wollmershäuser, T. (2012). "Target loans, current account balances and capital flows: The ECB's rescue facility". International Tax and Public Finance. 19 (4): 468–508. doi:10.1007/s10797-012-9236-x.
  15. ^ The authors presented their findings at various conferences, such as H.-W. Sinn’s lectures on May 9th 2011 at the Humboldt University 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine and showed that TARGET balances are classical balance-of-payment imbalances. Their method was also used later by the ECB itself, in their October 2011 monthly report.
  16. ^ European Central Bank: TARGET2 balances of national central banks in the Euro area, Monthly Bulletin, October 2011, p. 36, footnote 5.
  17. ^ Sinn, Hans-Werner, "Fed versus ECB: How TARGET debts can be repaid", Vox, March 2012.
  18. ^ Sinn, Hans-Werner, Die Target-Kredite der deutschen Bundesbank, ifo Schnelldienst 65, Special issue, 21 March 2012, pp. 3–34.
  19. ^ Sinn, Hans-Werner, Die Target-Falle: Gefahren für unser Geld und unsere Kinder, Hanser, Munich 2012.
  20. ^ Sinn, Hans-Werner, Helmut Schlesinger, Wilhelm Kohler, Charles B. Blankart, Manfred J. M. Neumann, Peter Bernholz, Thomas Mayer, Jochen Moebert and Christian Weistroffer, Georg Milbradt, Stefan Homburg, Friedrich L. Sell and Beate Sauer, Ingo Sauer, Jens Ulbrich and Alexander Lipponer, Christian Fahrholz and Andreas Freytag, Ulrich Bindseil, Philippine Cour-Thimann und Philipp Koenig, Franz-Christoph Zeitler, Klaus Reeh, in: Sinn, Hans-Werner (ed.), , CESifo Forum, Special Issue, January 2012.
  21. ^ Marsh, David, "10 myths about the European quagmire", MarketWatch, 27 February 2012. Myth No. 9 addresses Target-2. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  22. ^ Deutsche Bundesbank, TARGET2-Salden der Bundesbank 2 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Press release, 22 February 2011.
  23. ^ Deutsche Bundesbank, The dynamics of the Bundesbank’s TARGET2 balance, Monthly Report 63, March 2011, No. 3, pp. 34–37.
  24. ^ Marsh, David, "Weidmann reawakens debate on Bundesbank’s power", MarketWatch, 5 March 2012. Retrieved 2012-03-07.
  25. ^ Jens Ulbrich and Alexander Lipponer, , in: Sinn, Hans-Werner (ed.), The European Balance of Payments Crisis, CESifo Forum, Special Issue, January 2012, pp.73–76.
  26. ^ ifo Institute: "The Exposure Level"
  27. ^ Institute of Empirical Economic Research, Osnabrueck University: Target2 data
  28. ^ De Grauwe, Paul and Yuemei Ji, What Germany should fear most is its own fear, VOX, 18 September 2012.
  29. ^ a b Sinn, Hans-Werner, Target losses in case of a euro breakup, Vox, 22 October 2012.
  30. ^ Sinn, Hans-Werner, Die Target-Falle: Gefahren für unser Geld und unsere Kinder, Hanser, Munich 2012, Chapter 7, Section "Die Umwidmung der Ersparnisse"
  31. ^ Lubik, Thomas A., and Karl Rhodes, "TARGET2: Symptom, Not Cause, of Eurozone Woes", richmondfed.org, August 2012; via Steve Goldstein, "Fed bank weighs in on hot Europe debate", MarketWatch, 6 August 2012. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
  32. ^ Wolman, Alexander L. (2013). "Federal Reserve Interdistrict Settlement" (PDF). Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly. 99 (2ó). 117–141, 128–9.
  33. ^ Marsh, David, "Opinion: Germany worrying again about its hidden bailout of Italy, Greece", MarketWatch, 21 December 2016. Retrieved 2017-01-26.

External links edit

  • Monthly TARGET2 balances
  • Sinn, Hans-Werner, The Euro Trap. On Bursting Bubbles, Budgets, and Beliefs, Oxford University Press, July 2014.
  • ifo Policy Issue: Target Balances
  • European Central Bank on TARGET2
  • Institute of Empirical Economic Research, Osnabrück University: Regularly updated dataset on Target2 balances of the Euro area

target2, other, uses, target, disambiguation, trans, european, automated, real, time, gross, settlement, express, transfer, system, real, time, gross, settlement, rtgs, system, eurozone, available, eurozone, countries, developed, owned, eurosystem, based, inte. For other uses see Target disambiguation TARGET2 Trans European Automated Real time Gross Settlement Express Transfer System is the real time gross settlement RTGS system for the Eurozone and is available to non Eurozone countries It was developed by and is owned by the Eurosystem TARGET2 is based on an integrated central technical infrastructure called the Single Shared Platform SSP 1 SSP is operated by three providing central banks France Banque de France Germany Deutsche Bundesbank and Italy Banca d Italia TARGET2 started to replace TARGET in November 2007 TARGET2 is also an interbank RTGS payment system for the clearing of cross border transfers in the eurozone Participants in the system are either direct or indirect Direct participants hold an RTGS account and have access to real time information and control tools They are responsible for all payments sent from or received on their accounts by themselves or any indirect participants operating through them Indirect participation means that payment orders are always sent to and received from the system via a direct participant with only the relevant direct participant having a legal relationship with the Eurosystem Finally bank branches and subsidiaries can choose to participate in TARGET2 as multi addressee access or addressable BICs The Eurosystem in March 2023 switched its real time gross settlement from TARGET2 to T2 which follows ISO 20022 The switch involves transactions for settling payments related to the Eurosystem s monetary policy operations as well as bank to bank and commercial transactions TARGET2 previously handled transactions for over 2 2 trillion per day 2 Contents 1 History 2 Objectives 3 Participation 4 Activity 4 1 Single Shared Platform 4 2 Statistics 4 3 Liquidity management 4 4 Access criteria 4 5 Pricing 4 6 Holidays 4 7 Operations 4 7 1 Outages 4 8 Intra system credit facilities 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editSince the establishment of the European Economic Community in 1958 there has been movement towards an integrated European financial market This movement has been marked by several events In the field of payments the most visible were the launch of the euro in 1999 and the cash changeover in the euro area countries in 2002 The establishment of the large value central bank payment system TARGET was less visible but also of great importance It formed an integral part of the introduction of the euro and facilitated the rapid integration of the euro area money market The implementation of TARGET2 was based on a decision of the ECB Council of autumn 2002 TARGET2 started operations on 19 November 2007 when the first group of countries Austria Cyprus Germany Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Malta and Slovenia migrated to the SSP This first migration was successful and confirmed the reliability of SSP After this initial migration TARGET2 already settled around 50 of overall traffic in terms of volume and 30 in terms of value On 18 February 2008 the second migration successfully migrated to TARGET2 comprising Belgium Finland France Ireland the Netherlands Portugal and Spain On 19 May 2008 the final group migrated to TARGET2 comprising Denmark Estonia Greece Italy Poland and the ECB The six month migration process went smoothly and did not cause any operational disruptions Slovakia joined TARGET2 on 1 January 2009 Bulgaria joined in February 2010 Romania on 4 July 2011 and Croatia in February 2016 Objectives editThe objectives of TARGET2 are to support the implementation of the Eurosystem s monetary policy and the functioning of the euro money market minimise systemic risk in the payments market increase the efficiency of cross border payments in euro and maintain the integration and stability of the Eurozone money market Participation editThe use of TARGET2 is mandatory for the settlement of any euro operations involving the Eurosystem The Eurosystem consists of the European Central Bank ECB and the national central banks of the 19 European Union member states that are part of the Eurozone 3 Participation in TARGET2 is mandatory for new member states joining the Eurozone TARGET2 services in euro are available to non Eurozone states National central banks of states which have not yet adopted the euro can also participate in TARGET2 to facilitate the settlement of transactions in euro Central banks from four non Eurozone states Bulgaria Denmark Poland and Romania also participate in TARGET2 In 2012 TARGET2 had 999 direct participants 3 386 indirect participants and 13 313 correspondents Activity editTARGET2 is the real time gross settlement RTGS system with payment transactions being settled one by one on a continuous basis in central bank money with immediate finality There is no upper or lower limit on the value of payments TARGET2 mainly settles operations of monetary policy and money market operations TARGET2 has to be used for all payments involving the Eurosystem as well as for the settlement of operations of all large value net settlement systems and securities settlement systems handling the euro TARGET2 is operated on a single technical platform The business relationships are established between the TARGET2 users and their national central bank In terms of the value processed TARGET2 is one of the largest payment systems in the world 4 Single Shared Platform edit TARGET2 is a harmonised RTGS system covering the Eurozone It operates on the Single Shared Platform SSP which replaced the decentralised first generation TARGET system It was designed to provide an enhanced service with benefits for economies of scale which allows it to charge lower fees and offer cost efficiency All participants of the Eurosystem and outside it can access the same functionalities and interfaces as well as a single price structure SWIFT standards and services i e FIN InterAct FileAct and Browse are used in the harmonised communication between the system and its participants SSP has adopted a modular approach with each module being closely related to a specific service The Payments Module for example is used for the processing of payments Some modules i e the Home Accounting Module the Standing Facilities Module and the Reserve Management Module can be used by individual central banks on an optional basis Central banks which do not use particular modules set up other applications within their own internal technical environments to perform such functions Before the introduction of TARGET2 some central banks held home accounts also called proprietary home accounting systems outside their RTGS systems These were used primarily to manage minimum reserves standing facilities and cash withdrawals but also to settle ancillary systems transactions It was agreed that in the context of the new system these types of transaction should ultimately be settled on the RTGS accounts held on the SSP However some countries domestic arrangements did not allow these operations to be moved rapidly to the SSP As a result the Eurosystem agreed on a maximum transition period of four years for moving the settlement of these payments to the SSP The Information and Control Module ICM allows direct users to access information and manage parameters linked to balances and payments online Via the ICM users have access to the Payments Module and the Static Data Management function Users of the ICM are able to choose what information they receive and when Urgent messages e g system broadcasts from central banks and warnings concerning payments with a debit time indicator are automatically displayed on the screen TARGET2 provides settlement services for a wide range of ancillary systems While each of these used to have its own settlement procedure TARGET2 now offers six generic procedures for the settlement of ancillary systems and allows these systems to access any account on the SSP via a standardised interface Statistics edit In 2012 TARGET2 settled the cash positions of 82 ancillary systems processed a daily average of 354 185 payments representing a daily average value of 2 477 billion the average value of a TARGET2 transaction was 7 1 million two thirds of all TARGET2 payments i e 68 had a value of less than 50 000 each 11 of all payments had value of over 1 million each the peak in volume turnover was 29 June 2012 with 536 524 transactions and peak value turnover was on 1 March 2012 with 3 718 billion TARGET2 s share in total large value payment system traffic in euro was 92 in value terms and 58 in volume terms the SSP technical availability was 100 and 99 94 of TARGET2 payments were processed in less than five minutes 5 Liquidity management edit The availability and cost of liquidity are two crucial issues for the smooth processing of payments in RTGS systems In TARGET2 liquidity can be managed very flexibly and is available at low cost since fully remunerated minimum reserves which credit institutions are required to hold with their central bank can be used in full for settlement purposes during the day The averaging provisions applied to minimum reserves allow banks to be flexible in their end of day liquidity management The overnight lending and deposit facilities also allow for continuous liquidity management decisions The Eurosystem provides intraday credit This credit must be fully collateralised and no interest is charged However all Eurosystem credit must be fully collateralised i e secured by other assets The range of eligible collateral is very wide Assets eligible for monetary policy purposes are also eligible for intraday credit Under Eurosystem rules credit can only be granted by the national central bank of the member state where the participant is established Banks treasury managers have a keen interest in the use of automated processes for the optimisation of payment and liquidity management They need tools that will allow them to track activity across accounts and where possible make accurate intraday and overnight funding decisions from a single location e g their head office TARGET2 users have via the Information and Control Module access to comprehensive online information and easy to use liquidity management features that meet their business needs TARGET2 has a range of features allowing efficient liquidity management including payment priorities timed transactions liquidity reservation facilities limits liquidity pooling and optimisation procedures Access criteria edit The access criteria for TARGET2 aim to allow broad levels of participation by institutions involved in clearing and settlement activities Supervision by a competent authority ensures the soundness of such institutions Supervised credit institutions established within the European Economic Area are the primary participants Supervised investment firms clearing and settlement organisations which are subject to oversight and government treasuries can also be admitted as participants Pricing edit There are two pricing schemes 6 Recurring fixed charges and a fixed transaction fee Monthly fixed charge 100 00 Single transaction price 0 80 Recurring fixed charge and a variable transaction fee based on number of transactions Monthly fixed charge 1 250 00 Variable transaction price volume based between 0 125 and 0 60Holidays edit The TARGET2 system is closed on Saturdays and Sundays and on the following public holidays in all participating countries 1 January Good Friday and Easter Monday according to the calendar used by Western Christianity 1 May 25 December and 26 December 7 8 Operations edit Outages edit In October 2020 the system and TARGET2 Securities experienced an almost 11 hour outage attributed to a software glitch in a third party network device by the ECB per a report Much shorter service interruptions of different sorts have hit Target2 in July 2019 November 2018 and December 2017 and in October 2020 Euronext NV a stock market on the continent also experienced some outages per the report 9 Intra system credit facilities edit needs update nbsp TARGET2 balances of selected countries of Euro system starting 2001Starting during the financial crisis of 2007 2008 and European debt crisis of ensuing years the main subjects of criticism were the unlimited credit facilities made available since the establishment of the TARGET system by the national central banks of the Eurosystem on the one hand and by the ECB on the other The issue of the increasing TARGET balances was brought to public attention for the first time in early 2011 by Hans Werner Sinn president of the Munich based Ifo Institute for Economic Research In an article in Wirtschaftswoche he drew attention to the enormous increase in TARGET claims held by Germany s Bundesbank from 5 billion at the end of 2006 to 326 billion at the end of 2010 and to the attendant liability risk 10 In the German daily Suddeutsche Zeitung he put the entire volume of the TARGET liabilities of Greece Ireland Portugal and Spain at 340 billion at the end of February 2011 Moreover he pointed out that if these countries should exit the Eurozone and declare insolvency Germany s liability risk would amount to 33 of that sum or 114 billion relating these sums to the other rescue facilities of euro countries and the International Monetary Fund Before he made them public TARGET deficits or surpluses were not the subject of major public attention even though they were disclosed by Eurosystem central banks 11 Shortly thereafter Sinn interpreted the TARGET balances for the first time within the context of current account deficits international private capital movements and the international shifting of the refinancing credit that the national central banks of the Eurosystem grant to the commercial banks in their jurisdiction He proved that the ECB system compensated the interruption and reversal in capital flows triggered by the financial crisis by shifting refinancing credit among national central banks The increase in TARGET liabilities is a direct measure of net payment orders across borders i e of the portion of the current account deficit that is not counterbalanced by capital imports or equivalently the sum of the current account deficit and net capital exports Indirectly they also measure a country s amount of central bank money created and lent out beyond what is needed for domestic circulation Since every country needs a relatively steady amount of central bank money for its domestic transactions payment orders to other countries which reduce the domestic stock of money must be offset by a continuous issuing of new refinancing credit i e the creation of new central bank money Similarly the increase in money balances in the country whose central bank honours the payment orders reduces the demand for fresh refinancing credit Hence a country s TARGET liabilities also indicate the extent to which its central bank has replaced the capital markets to finance its current account deficit as well as any possible capital flight by creating new central bank money through corresponding refinancing credit Sinn illustrated that from an economic perspective TARGET credit and formal rescue facilities serve the same purpose and involve similar liability risks 12 13 Sinn s presentation on 19 May 2011 at the Munich Economic Summit motivated an op ed column in the Financial Times They reconstructed the data on the basis of the balance sheets of the Eurosystem s national central banks and the balance sheet statistics of the International Monetary Fund Later in June 2011 Hans Werner Sinn and Timo Wollmershaeuser compiled the first panel database of the Eurozone s TARGET balances 14 15 16 The authors point out that the additional creation of money by the central banks of the crisis stricken countries was provided by a lowering of the standards for the collateral that commercial banks have to provide to their national central banks to obtain refinancing credit Furthermore they showed that the commercial banks of the Eurozone s core countries used the incoming liquidity to reduce the refinancing credit they drew from their national central bank even lending the surplus liquidity to this central bank which implies that the TARGET balances indirectly also measure the reallocation of refinancing credit among the countries of the Eurozone The authors showed that the national central banks of the northern countries became net debtors to their own banking systems Sinn and Wollmershaeuser argue that the euro crisis is a balance of payments crisis which in its substance is similar to the Bretton Woods crisis Moreover they show the extent to which TARGET credit financed current account deficits or capital flight in Greece Ireland Portugal Spain and Italy They also show that the current account deficits of Greece and Portugal were financed for years by refinancing credits of their national central banks and the concomitant TARGET credit They also document the Irish capital flight and the capital flight from Spain and Italy which began in earnest in summer 2011 Following Sinn 17 the authors compare the TARGET balances of the Eurosystem with the corresponding balances in the US settlement system Interdistrict Settlement Account and point out that US balances relative to US GDP have decreased thanks to a regularly performed settlement procedure in which ownership shares in a common Fed clearing portfolio are reallocated among the various district Feds comprising the US Federal Reserve System They advocate the establishment of a similar system in Europe to end the ECB s role as a provider of international public credit that undercuts private market conditions Hans Werner Sinn addressed the TARGET balances issue again in a special edition of ifo Schnelldienst and made it the main topic of his book Die Target Falle The Target Trap published in early October 2012 18 19 A number of economists took a stand on the issue of the TARGET balances in a publication of the Ifo Institute confirming Sinn s analysis 20 Financial commentator David Marsh writing in early 2012 noted that TARGET2 provides automatic central bank funding for EMU countries suffering capital outflows provided through it and that the balances would have to be shared out by central banks throughout the Eurosystem if EMU fragments into its constituent parts So the pressure on Germany is to keep the balances growing in order to avoid crystallization of losses that would be hugely damaging not just to Berlin but also to central banks and governments in Paris and Rome 21 The official reactions to Sinn s research findings were mixed At first in February and March 2011 the Bundesbank downplayed the TARGET balances as an irrelevant statistical position 22 23 However in early 2012 Bundesbank chief Jens Weidmann wrote a letter to ECB head Mario Draghi on the subject which found its way into the columns of the conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper It appeared to suggest more secure collateralisation for the overall ECB credits to weaker EMU central banks which now amount to more than 800 billion under the ECB s TARGET2 electronic payment system Marsh noted in a subsequent column 24 Jens Ulbrich and Alexander Lipponer economists at the Bundesbank justified the policy of the ECB during the European balance of payments crisis as follows In the crisis the Eurosystem consciously assumed a larger intermediation function in view of the massive disruptions in the interbank market by extending its liquidity control instruments With this greater role in the provision of central bank money essentially by changing to a full allotment procedure in refinancing operations and the extension of longer term refinancing operations the total volume of refinancing credits provided has increased temporarily even markedly At the same time the quality requirements for the underlying collateral were reduced in the crisis The higher risk was accepted to maintain the functioning of the financial system under more difficult conditions 25 The Ifo Institute s regularly updated Exposure level indicator Haftungspegel shows Germany s potential financial burden should the crisis stricken euro countries exit the currency union and declare insolvency 26 In another development the Institute of Empirical Economic Research at the University of Osnabrueck collects and publishes TARGET2 data from all euro countries on the basis of the balance sheets of each central bank 27 Nevertheless there are also some economists who contradict some points of Sinn s analysis Paul De Grauwe and Yuemei Ji argue that Germany s and other countries TARGET claims could be made void without suffering any losses since the value of the central bank money being fiat money is independent of a central bank s assets 28 Sinn in his rejoinder showed that the TARGET balances represent the shift of refinancing credit to the crisis stricken countries representing thus the claim on the interest returns from these countries Eliminating the TARGET balances would thus entail a real loss of resources amounting to the present value of this interest income which is reflected exactly by the amount of TARGET claims This loss would result in a smaller transfer of Bundesbank s revenues to the German budget and should the situation arise in the necessity to recapitalise the Bundesbank through increased taxation 29 Sinn uses the same reasoning in his book Die Target Falle 30 Sinn points out that the option of self rescue for the crisis affected countries by drawing TARGET credit forces Germany to approve the formal rescue facilities and eventually to accept eurobonds as well He considers the resulting path dependence in policy making a trap Analysis of TARGET2 balances countering the Ifo conclusions have been advanced by economist Karl Whelan at University College Dublin In summer 2012 Thomas A Lubik a senior economist and research advisor and Karl Rhodes a writer both at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Virginia US cited Whelan s work and also drew parallels and distinctions between the US Fed and the ECB in analysing the balances Lubik and Rhodes argued that TARGET2 merely reflects persistent imbalances in current accounts and capital accounts It does not cause them and does not represent a stealth bailout of the periphery nations 31 Sinn countered that he was misinterpreted in this point insofar as he was just saying that the current account deficits were sustained with the extra refinancing credit behind the TARGET balances and this would not equate to claiming that current account deficits and TARGET deficits were positively correlated 29 Alexander L Wolman believes that rising Interdistrict Settlement Account ISA balances the US equivalent of rising TARGET balances if there were no yearly rebalancing would not be a reason for concern in the US because the borderlines of the Federal Reserve Districts do not follow national not even state borders Further a rising ISA balance of the Federal Reserve District of New York would be regarded as not surprising as New York is the financial center of the United States Until 1975 there was no rebalancing between Federal Reserve districts a fact which did not lead to major discussions 32 Finally in late 2016 after some years of relative improvement but with rising worries over Italy the level of TARGET2 intra eurozone balances at the ECB had surpassed 2012 s record levels The claims represented half of the Germany s net foreign assets and were on track shortly to reach 1 trillion if trends continued unchecked 33 See also editTARGET2 Securities SWIFT Fedwire European Central Bank FedNowReferences editThis article incorporates text from the corresponding German Wikipedia articles on TARGET and TARGET2 as of 4 April 2008 More text also from the website of the European Central Bank which provides and maintains information on TARGET2 both for the general public as for professional users of TARGET2 Single Shared Platform General Functional Specifications Version 2 1 Europa web portal Successful launch of new T2 wholesale payment system European Central Bank 21 March 2023 European Central Bank Eurosystem Organisation Archived from the original on 14 September 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2016 TARGET Annual Report 2012 PDF Europa web portal 2013 Retrieved 11 June 2016 Target 2 Europa web portal 26 January 2017 TARGET2 Prices Bundesbank de Archived from the original on 23 April 2012 Retrieved 11 June 2016 Information guide for TARGET2 users PDF October 2009 p 13 Retrieved 30 July 2016 On the Location of the seats of the institutions of the European Union PDF 26 October 2012 p 1 Archived from the original on 16 April 2016 Retrieved 30 July 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Fairless Tom Europe s Core Payments Network Disrupted by Technical Malfunction subscription required The Wall Street Journal 28 October 2020 re Euronext s 2020 event in WSJ subscription required Retrieved 2020 10 28 Sinn Hans Werner Neue Abgrunde Wirtschaftswoche No 8 21 February 2011 p 35 Sinn Hans Werner Tickende Zeitbombe Suddeutsche Zeitung No 77 2 April 2011 p 24 Sinn Hans Werner Die riskante Kreditersatzpolitik der EZB Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung No 103 4 May 2011 p 10 Sinn Hans Werner Target Salden Aussenhandel und Geldschopfung ifo Schnelldienst 64 No 9 2011 Sinn H W Wollmershauser T 2012 Target loans current account balances and capital flows The ECB s rescue facility International Tax and Public Finance 19 4 468 508 doi 10 1007 s10797 012 9236 x The authors presented their findings at various conferences such as H W Sinn s lectures on May 9th 2011 at the Humboldt University Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine and showed that TARGET balances are classical balance of payment imbalances Their method was also used later by the ECB itself in their October 2011 monthly report European Central Bank TARGET2 balances of national central banks in the Euro area Monthly Bulletin October 2011 p 36 footnote 5 Sinn Hans Werner Fed versus ECB How TARGET debts can be repaid Vox March 2012 Sinn Hans Werner Die Target Kredite der deutschen Bundesbank ifo Schnelldienst 65 Special issue 21 March 2012 pp 3 34 Sinn Hans Werner Die Target Falle Gefahren fur unser Geld und unsere Kinder Hanser Munich 2012 Sinn Hans Werner Helmut Schlesinger Wilhelm Kohler Charles B Blankart Manfred J M Neumann Peter Bernholz Thomas Mayer Jochen Moebert and Christian Weistroffer Georg Milbradt Stefan Homburg Friedrich L Sell and Beate Sauer Ingo Sauer Jens Ulbrich and Alexander Lipponer Christian Fahrholz and Andreas Freytag Ulrich Bindseil Philippine Cour Thimann und Philipp Koenig Franz Christoph Zeitler Klaus Reeh in Sinn Hans Werner ed The European Balance of Payments Crisis CESifo Forum Special Issue January 2012 Marsh David 10 myths about the European quagmire MarketWatch 27 February 2012 Myth No 9 addresses Target 2 Retrieved 2012 02 27 Deutsche Bundesbank TARGET2 Salden der Bundesbank Archived 2 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Press release 22 February 2011 Deutsche Bundesbank The dynamics of the Bundesbank s TARGET2 balance Monthly Report 63 March 2011 No 3 pp 34 37 Marsh David Weidmann reawakens debate on Bundesbank s power MarketWatch 5 March 2012 Retrieved 2012 03 07 Jens Ulbrich and Alexander Lipponer Balances in the Target2 Payments System A Problem in Sinn Hans Werner ed The European Balance of Payments Crisis CESifo Forum Special Issue January 2012 pp 73 76 ifo Institute The Exposure Level Institute of Empirical Economic Research Osnabrueck University Target2 data De Grauwe Paul and Yuemei Ji What Germany should fear most is its own fear VOX 18 September 2012 a b Sinn Hans Werner Target losses in case of a euro breakup Vox 22 October 2012 Sinn Hans Werner Die Target Falle Gefahren fur unser Geld und unsere Kinder Hanser Munich 2012 Chapter 7 Section Die Umwidmung der Ersparnisse Lubik Thomas A and Karl Rhodes TARGET2 Symptom Not Cause of Eurozone Woes richmondfed org August 2012 via Steve Goldstein Fed bank weighs in on hot Europe debate MarketWatch 6 August 2012 Retrieved 2012 08 06 Wolman Alexander L 2013 Federal Reserve Interdistrict Settlement PDF Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly 99 2o 117 141 128 9 Marsh David Opinion Germany worrying again about its hidden bailout of Italy Greece MarketWatch 21 December 2016 Retrieved 2017 01 26 External links editMonthly TARGET2 balances Sinn Hans Werner The Euro Trap On Bursting Bubbles Budgets and Beliefs Oxford University Press July 2014 ifo Policy Issue Target Balances European Central Bank on TARGET2 Institute of Empirical Economic Research Osnabruck University Regularly updated dataset on Target2 balances of the Euro area Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title TARGET2 amp oldid 1181616660, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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