EU financial services markets fragmentation works as tariff, Albuquerque says
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on January 7, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 27, 2026

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on January 7, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 27, 2026

EU financial markets face a 110% tariff-like burden due to fragmentation. Efforts are underway to integrate markets and boost competitiveness.
By Sergio Goncalves and Inti Landauro
LISBON (Reuters) - European Union's financial industry faces burdens equivalent to a 110% tariff because of the fragmentation of the bloc's markets for financial services, EU Commissioner for Financial Services Maria Luis Albuquerque said on Tuesday.
Discussions about replacing the current patchwork of separately regulated markets with a Capital Markets Union have been dragging on for a decade without much progress. In the past months, however, EU leaders have pledged to intensify efforts to integrate the bloc's financial markets as one of ways of boosting Europe's competitiveness.
Addressing a diplomatic event in Lisbon, Albuquerque said the EU needed to complete its banking union and deepen the capital market integration.
Designed after the financial crisis, the banking union aims to centralise supervision of big lenders at the European Central Bank, but divisions remain over some aspects, such as a joint deposit protection scheme.
A Capital Markets Union would unify national rules on bankruptcies, prospectuses, listing requirements and taxation to make it easier to raise funds in Europe, making it a viable alternative to deep U.S. capital markets.
Albuquerque said there should be fewer cases where Europe has the resources and good ideas, but "the investments are made in the United States."
(Reporting by Sergio Goncalves and Inti Landauro, Editing by Louise Heavens, David Latona and Tomasz Janowski)
The article discusses the fragmentation of EU financial markets and its tariff-like impact on the industry.
It aims to unify financial regulations across EU to ease fund raising and compete with US markets.
Challenges include divisions over a joint deposit protection scheme and centralized supervision.
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