Considerations on COM(2018)135 - Credit servicers, credit purchasers and the recovery of collateral

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dossier COM(2018)135 - Credit servicers, credit purchasers and the recovery of collateral.
document COM(2018)135 EN
date November 24, 2021
 
table>(1)The establishment of a comprehensive strategy to address the issue of non-performing loans (NPLs) is a priority for the Union. While addressing NPLs is primarily the responsibility of credit institutions and Member States, there is also a clear Union dimension to the reduction of current stocks of NPLs, as well as to the prevention of any excessive build-up of NPLs in the future. Given the interconnectedness of the banking and financial systems across the Union, where credit institutions operate in multiple jurisdictions and Member States, there is significant potential for spill-over effects between Member States and the Union at large, both in terms of economic growth and financial stability.
(2)An integrated financial system will enhance the resilience of the economic and monetary union to adverse shocks by facilitating private cross-border risk-sharing, while at the same time reducing the need for public risk-sharing. In order to achieve those objectives, the Union should complete the banking union and further develop a capital markets union (CMU). Addressing high stocks of NPLs and their possible future accumulation is essential to strengthening the banking union as it is indispensable for ensuring competition in the banking sector, preserving financial stability and encouraging lending so as to create jobs and growth within the Union.

(3)The Council conclusions of 11 July 2017 on Action Plan to Tackle Non-Performing Loans in Europe (the ‘Action Plan’) called upon various institutions to take appropriate measures to further address the high number of NPLs in the Union and prevent their possible future accumulation. The Action Plan sets out a comprehensive approach that focuses on a mix of complementary policy actions in four areas: (i) bank supervision and regulation, (ii) reform of restructuring, insolvency and debt recovery frameworks, (iii) developing secondary markets for distressed assets, and (iv) fostering restructuring of the banking system. Action in those areas is to be taken at national level and at Union level where appropriate. The Commission announced a similar intention in its communication of 11 October 2017 on completing the banking union, which called for a comprehensive package on tackling NPLs within the Union.

(4)This Directive, together with other measures which the Commission has put forward, as well as the action taken by the European Central Bank (ECB) in the context of banking supervision under the Single Supervisory Mechanism and by the European Supervisory Authority (European Banking Authority) (EBA), established by Regulation (EU) No 1093/2010 of the European Parliament and of the Council (4), will create the appropriate environment for credit institutions to deal with NPLs on their balance sheets, and will reduce the risk of future NPL accumulation.

(5)When developing macro-prudential approaches to prevent the emergence of system-wide risks associated with NPLs, the European Systemic Risk Board, established by Regulation (EU) No 1092/2010 of the European Parliament and of the Council (5), is required to issue, where appropriate, macro-prudential warnings and recommendations relating to the secondary market for NPLs.

(6)Regulation (EU) 2019/630 of the European Parliament and of the Council (6) introduced new rules in Regulation (EU) No 575/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council (7) that require credit institutions to put aside sufficient resources when new loans become non-performing, which should create appropriate incentives to address NPLs at an early stage and should prevent an excessive accumulation of them. Where loans become non-performing, more efficient enforcement mechanisms for secured loans would allow credit institutions to implement a holistic strategy to enforce NPLs, subject to strong and effective safeguards for borrowers. Nevertheless, should NPL stocks become too high, credit institutions should be able to sell them in efficient, competitive and transparent secondary markets to other operators. Competent authorities of credit institutions guide them in doing so, based on their existing bank-specific, so-called Pillar 2, powers under Regulation (EU) No 575/2013. Where NPLs become a significant and broad-based problem, Member States are able to set up national asset management companies or other alternative measures within the framework of current state aid and bank resolution rules.

(7)This Directive should enable credit institutions to better deal with loans that become non-performing by improving conditions for the sale of the credit to third parties. Moreover, when credit institutions face a large build-up of NPLs and lack the staff or expertise to properly service them, they should be able either to outsource the servicing of those loans to a specialised credit servicer or to transfer the credit agreement to a credit purchaser that has the necessary risk appetite and expertise to manage it.

(8)While the terms ‘loans’ and ‘banks’ are commonly referred to in the public debate in some Member States, the terms ‘credit’ or ‘credit agreements’ and ‘credit institution’ are used hereafter. Moreover, this Directive covers both a creditor’s rights under a non-performing credit agreement and the non-performing credit agreement itself.

(9)This Directive should foster the development of secondary markets for NPLs in the Union by removing impediments to, and laying down safeguards for, the transfer of NPLs by credit institutions to credit purchasers, while at the same time safeguarding borrowers’ rights. Any measures adopted should harmonise the authorisation requirements for credit servicers. This Directive should therefore establish a Union-wide framework for both purchasers and servicers of non-performing credit agreements issued by credit institutions, whereby credit servicers should obtain authorisation from, and be subject to the supervision of, Member States’ competent authorities.

(10)Currently, credit purchasers and credit servicers cannot reap the benefits of the internal market due to barriers erected by divergent national regimes in the absence of a dedicated and coherent regulatory and supervisory regime. At present, there are no common Union standards for the regulation of credit servicers. In particular, no common standards have been set for the regulation of debt collection. Member States have very different rules for how credit purchasers are able to acquire credit agreements from credit institutions. Credit purchasers that purchase credit issued by credit institutions are not regulated in some Member States, while in others they are subject to various requirements, sometimes amounting to a requirement to obtain an authorisation as a credit institution. Those differences between regulatory requirements have resulted in considerable obstacles to legally purchasing credit cross-border in the Union, mainly by increasing the compliance costs faced when seeking to purchase credit portfolios. As a result, credit purchasers operate in a limited number of Member States, which has resulted in weak competition in the internal market as the number of interested credit purchasers remains low. That in turn has led to an inefficient secondary market for NPLs. In addition, the essentially national markets for NPLs tend to remain of a small volume.

(11)The limited participation of credit purchasers has resulted in low demand, weak competition and low bid prices for portfolios of credit agreements on secondary markets, which is a disincentive for credit institutions to sell non-performing credit agreements. Therefore, there is a clear Union dimension to the development of markets for credits granted by credit institutions and sold to credit purchasers. On the one hand, it should be possible for credit institutions to sell non-performing credit agreements on a Union-wide scale in efficient, competitive and transparent secondary markets. On the other hand, completion of the banking union and the CMU make it necessary to act in order to prevent the accumulation of non-performing credit agreements on credit institutions’ balance sheets so that they can continue to perform their role of financing the economy. Therefore, this Directive covers credit purchasers acting in the course of their trade, business or profession when they acquire a credit agreement only where that credit agreement is a non-performing credit agreement.

(12)Non-performing credit originally granted by a credit institution might become performing in the process of servicing the credit. In that case, credit servicers should be able to continue carrying out their activities, based on their authorisation as credit servicers in accordance with this Directive.

(13)Certain Member States regulate credit servicing activities, but to varying degrees. Firstly, only some Member States regulate those activities, and, those that do, define them very differently. The increased regulatory compliance costs operate as a barrier to the development of expansion strategies by means of secondary establishment or cross-border provision of services. Secondly, a considerable number of Member States require authorisations for some of the activities that those credit servicers engage in. Those authorisations impose different requirements and do not provide for possibilities of cross-border scaling up. Again, that operates as a barrier to the provision of cross-border services. Finally, in some cases, local establishment is required by law, which hinders the exercise of the freedom to provide cross-border services.

(14)While credit servicers can provide their services to credit institutions and to credit purchasers that are not credit institutions, a competitive and integrated market for credit servicers is linked to the development of a competitive and integrated market for credit purchasers. Credit purchasers often decide to outsource credit servicing activities to other entities, as they do not have the capacity to service credit themselves, and thus can be reluctant to purchase credit from credit institutions if they cannot outsource certain services.

(15)The lack of competitive pressure on the market for purchasing credit and for credit servicing activities results in credit servicing firms charging credit purchasers high fees for their services and leads to low prices on secondary markets for credit. That reduces incentives for credit institutions to offload their stock of NPLs.

(16)Therefore, action at Union level is necessary in order to address the position of credit purchasers and credit servicers in relation to non-performing credit originally granted by credit institutions. However, this Directive is without prejudice to the rules of Union and national law governing credit origination, including in cases when credit servicers can be considered to engage in credit intermediation. This Directive is also without prejudice to national rules imposing additional requirements in respect of a credit purchaser or a credit servicer as concerns the renegotiation of the terms and conditions of a credit agreement.

(17)It is open to Member States to regulate credit servicing activities that do not fall within the scope of this Directive, such as services offered for credit agreements issued by non-credit institutions or credit servicing activities performed by natural persons, including by imposing requirements equivalent to those under this Directive. Those entities and natural persons, however, would not benefit from the possibility of passporting such services to other Member States.

(18)This Directive should not affect restrictions under national law regarding the transfer of a creditor’s rights under a non-performing credit agreement, or a transfer of the non-performing credit agreement itself, that is not terminated in accordance with national civil law with the effect that all amounts payable under the credit agreement become immediately due, where that is required for the transfer to an entity outside the banking system. Accordingly, there will be Member States where, taking into account the national rules, the acquisition of non-performing credit agreements that are not past due, or are less than 90 days past due, or are not terminated in accordance with national civil law by non-regulated creditors, will remain limited. It is open to Member States to regulate the transfer of performing credit agreements, including by imposing requirements equivalent to those under this Directive.

(19)This Directive should not affect Union law concerning judicial cooperation in civil matters, notably the provisions on the law applicable to contractual obligations and on jurisdiction, including the application of those acts and provisions in individual cases under Regulations (EC) No 593/2008 (8) and (EU) No 1215/2012 (9) of the European Parliament and of the Council. All creditors and any persons representing them are bound to respect Union law in their dealings with the consumer and national authorities to ensure that consumer rights are protected.

(20)Credit servicers and credit purchasers should always act in good faith, treat borrowers fairly and respect their privacy. They should not harass nor give misleading information to borrowers. In advance of the first debt collection and whenever requested by borrowers, they should provide information to borrowers on, among others, the transfer that took place, the identification and contact details of the credit purchaser and of the credit servicer, where one is appointed, as well as information on the amounts due by the borrower and a statement to the effect that all relevant Union and national law continues to apply.

(21)In addition, this Directive does not reduce the scope of application of Union consumer protection rules and, to the extent that credit purchasers qualify as creditors under Directives 2008/48/EC (10) and 2014/17/EU (11) of the European Parliament and of the Council, they should be subject to the specific obligations set out in Article 20 of Directive 2008/48/EC and Article 35 of Directive 2014/17/EU, respectively. Moreover, this Directive is without prejudice to the protection of consumers guaranteed by Directive 2005/29/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (12), which prohibits unfair commercial practices including those carried out during the enforcement of a contract where a consumer is misled as to the consumer’s rights or obligations, or is subject to harassment, coercion or undue influence including in terms of the timing, location, nature or persistence of the enforcement actions, in terms of the use of threatening or abusive language or behaviour, or in terms of threats to take any action that cannot legally be taken.

(22)Article 47 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union ensures the right to a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal and the possibility of being advised, defended and represented by a lawyer. That can be of particular relevance for the full and complete understanding of all the issues and legal arguments being addressed and to ensure comprehensive preparation of court representation for the case in dispute. Borrowers who lack sufficient resources should be able to resort to legal aid, where that is necessary to ensure effective access to justice and under the conditions laid down by the applicable national laws.

(23)Union credit institutions undertake credit servicing activities as part of their normal business. They have the same obligations with regard to credit agreements that they have issued themselves as those purchased from another credit institution. Since they are already regulated and supervised, application of this Directive to their credit servicing or purchasing activities would mean unnecessary duplication of authorisation and compliance costs and therefore they are not covered by this Directive. The outsourcing by credit institutions of credit servicing activities, in relation to both performing and non-performing credit agreements, to credit servicers or to other third parties, is also outside the scope of this Directive because credit institutions are already required to observe the applicable outsourcing rules. Moreover, creditors that are non-credit institutions but are nevertheless supervised by a competent authority of a Member State in accordance with Directive 2008/48/EC or with Directive 2014/17/EU and undertake credit servicing activities for credits granted to consumers as part of their normal business are not covered by this Directive when performing credit servicing activities in that Member State. Furthermore, alternative investment fund managers, management companies and investment companies (provided that an investment company has not designated a management company) authorised or registered under Directive 2009/65/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (13) or Directive 2011/61/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council (14) should also not fall within the scope of this Directive. Finally, there are some professions that undertake ancillary activities similar to credit servicing activities as part of their profession, namely public notaries, lawyers and bailiffs that pursue their professional activities under national law, and that implement the enforcement of binding measures and, therefore, Member States should be able to exempt those professions from the application of this Directive.

(24)In order to allow existing credit purchasers and credit servicers to adapt to the requirements of the national provisions transposing this Directive and, in particular, to allow credit servicers to be authorised, this Directive allows entities that are currently providing credit servicing activities under national law to continue to do so in their home Member State for a period of 6 months after the transposition deadline of this Directive. After the expiry of that 6-month period, only credit servicers authorised under the national laws transposing this Directive should be permitted to operate on the market.

(25)Member States that already have in place rules equivalent to, or stricter than, those established in this Directive for credit servicing activities should be able to recognise in their national law transposing this Directive the possibility for existing entities providing credit servicing activities to be automatically recognised as authorised credit servicers.

(26)The authorisation of a credit servicer to provide credit servicing activities throughout the Union should be subject to a uniform and harmonised set of conditions that should be applied in a proportionate manner by the competent authorities.

(27)To avoid a reduction in borrower protection and in order to promote trust, the conditions for granting and maintaining an authorisation as a credit servicer should ensure that credit servicers, persons who hold a qualifying holding in the credit servicer, and members of its management or administrative organ, have a clean police record in relation to relevant criminal offences linked to, among others, crimes against property, crimes related to financial activities, money laundering, fraud or crimes against physical integrity, and are not subject to an insolvency procedure nor have previously been declared bankrupt, unless they have been reinstated in accordance with national law. Compliance with the requirement for members of the management or administrative organ of credit servicers to have been transparent, open and cooperative in their past business dealings with supervisory and regulatory authorities should be assessed based on the information available to, or within the knowledge of, the competent authority at the time the authorisation is granted. If no information is available, or if there is no knowledge of any information, or if there is no past interaction with supervisory and regulatory authorities at that time, then the requirement is deemed fulfilled.

(28)Member States should ensure that the management, as a whole, of a credit servicer has adequate knowledge and experience to conduct the business in a competent and responsible manner, according to the activity to be carried out. It is for each Member State to lay down the requirements regarding good repute, adequate knowledge and experience, but those should not impair the free movement of authorised credit servicers within the Union. For that purpose, the EBA should develop guidelines to reduce the risk of divergent interpretations of the requirements on adequate knowledge and experience. Further, to ensure compliance with the rules for debtor protection as well as with the rules for the protection of personal data, appropriate governance arrangements and internal control mechanisms, as well as appropriate procedures for the recording and handling of complaints, should be established and be subject to supervision. In addition, credit servicers should have in place adequate anti-money laundering and counter terrorist financing procedures where national provisions transposing Directive (EU) 2015/849 of the European Parliament and of the Council (15) designate credit servicers as obliged entities for the purpose of preventing and combating money laundering and terrorist financing. Moreover, credit servicers should be obliged to act fairly and with due consideration for the financial situation of borrowers. Where debt advice services facilitating debt repayment are available at national level, credit servicers should consider referring borrowers to such services.

(29)Member States should determine, in their national law transposing this Directive, whether or not credit servicers in their territory are permitted to receive and hold funds from borrowers while performing credit servicing activities. In cases where the receiving and holding of funds from borrowers is permitted in a Member State and credit servicers intend to do so as part of their business model, additional requirements should apply to those credit servicers, in order to deal with the risks that could arise in cases of insolvency, namely account and fund segregation, as well as in cases of the discharge of the borrower. Where a credit servicer’s home Member State prohibits credit servicers from receiving and holding funds from borrowers, a credit servicer cannot then do so, neither in its home Member State nor in any host Member State, even if a host Member State permits the receiving and holding of funds, precisely because the credit servicer was not authorised to that purpose by its home Member State. In contrast, where a home Member State does permit credit servicers to receive and hold funds from borrowers and includes in its national law the relevant requirements, a credit servicer should be able to receive and hold funds from borrowers in its home Member State as well as in any host Member State that also permits the receiving and holding of funds from borrowers.

(30)To avoid lengthy procedures and uncertainty, it is necessary to establish requirements regarding the information that applicants for authorisation as a credit servicer are required to submit, as well as reasonable deadlines for the issue of an authorisation and the circumstances for its withdrawal. Where competent authorities withdraw an authorisation of a credit servicer that provides credit servicing activities in other Member States, competent authorities of the host Member State and also of the Member State where the credit was granted, when different from the host and the home Member States, should be informed. Equally, an up-to-date public register or list should be established in the home and the host Member States and made publicly available on the website of the competent authorities to ensure transparency as regards the number and identity of authorised credit servicers.

(31)The contractual relationship between the credit servicer and the credit purchaser and the obligations of the credit servicer towards the credit purchaser should not be altered by the outsourcing of credit servicing activities to credit service providers. Credit servicers should be responsible for making sure that the outsourcing of their credit servicing activities to credit service providers does not result in undue operational risk, nor in non-compliance by the credit service provider with any requirements of Union or national law, nor restrict the capacity of a regulatory supervisor to perform its duty and safeguard borrower rights.

(32)When a credit purchaser entrusts to a credit servicer the management and enforcement of a credit agreement, the credit purchaser delegates its rights and duties and also its direct contact with the borrower to the credit servicer while still remaining ultimately responsible. Accordingly, the relationship between credit purchaser and credit servicer should be clearly established in a written credit servicing agreement and it should be possible for competent authorities to verify how such a relationship is determined. Moreover, credit servicers should act fairly and with due consideration for the financial situation of borrowers. To the extent that a credit purchaser does not itself perform the servicing of the credit agreements it acquires, Member States should be able to provide that the credit servicer and the credit purchaser are required to agree in the credit servicing agreement that the credit servicer notifies the credit purchaser prior to outsourcing credit servicing activities.

(33)To ensure the right of a credit servicer to engage in cross-border activities and to provide for their supervision, this Directive sets up a procedure for the exercise of the right of an authorised credit servicer to engage in cross-border activities. Communication between competent authorities of the home and the host Member States as well as with a credit servicer should take place within reasonable deadlines. The competent authorities of the Member State where the credit was granted should also receive information on cross-border activities from the competent authorities of the home Member State.

(34)A credit servicer carrying out activities in a host Member State should be subject to the restrictions and requirements established in the national law of that host Member State in accordance with this Directive, including, where applicable, the prohibition on receiving and holding funds from borrowers, that are not related to other authorisation requirements of credit servicers. If, under the national provisions of a host Member State transposing this Directive, additional requirements for authorisation as a credit servicer are imposed, such additional requirements should not apply to credit servicers performing cross-border credit servicing activities in that host Member State.

(35)In order to ensure an effective and efficient supervision of cross-border credit servicers, a specific framework should be created for cooperation between the competent authorities of the home and of the host Member States and, where appropriate, the competent authorities of the Member State where the credit was granted. That framework should allow the exchange of information, while preserving its confidentiality, professional secrecy, protection of individual and business rights, on- and off-site inspections, the provision of assistance, and the notification of results of checks and inspections and of any measures taken.

(36)An important prerequisite for the taking up of the role by credit purchasers and credit servicers should be that they have the possibility of accessing all relevant information and Member States should make that possible, while at the same time observing Union and national data protection rules. In that context, it is essential that credit institutions provide detailed information to prospective credit purchasers so as to enable them to conduct their own assessment of the value of a creditor’s rights under a non-performing credit agreement, or of the non-performing credit agreement itself. Credit institutions should provide that information only once during the process, either during the initial phase or the subsequent phases, but in any event prior to the conclusion of the contract of transfer. That obligation to provide information is necessary and justified in order for prospective credit purchasers to be able to make informed choices before entering into a transaction and, therefore, it is legitimate for credit institutions to share borrowers’ personal data with prospective credit purchasers. Such information should be strictly limited to what is necessary to enable prospective credit purchasers to assess the value of a creditor’s rights under a non-performing credit agreement, or of the non-performing credit agreement itself, and the likelihood of recovery of the value of that agreement. Member States should ensure that the provision of information to prospective credit purchasers and its subsequent use complies with the relevant Union data protection framework.

(37)Where a credit institution transfers non-performing credit agreements, it should be required to inform its competent authority and the competent authorities of the host Member State, on a biannual basis, of at least the aggregate outstanding balance of the transferred credit portfolios, as well as the number and size of the credits included and whether the transfer includes credit agreements concluded with consumers. For each credit portfolio transferred in a single transaction, the information provided should include the legal entity identifier (LEI) of the credit purchaser, or where applicable of its representative, or, where not available, the identity and address of the credit purchaser and, where applicable, of its representative in the Union. Competent authorities should be able to require that the information be provided on a quarterly basis instead, whenever they consider it necessary, including due to the high number of transactions during a crisis period. The competent authorities of the host Member State should be obliged to transmit that information to the authorities competent to supervise the credit purchaser. Such transparency requirements allow for a harmonised and effective monitoring of the transfer of credit agreements within the Union. In order to comply with the principle of proportionality, competent authorities should, in order to avoid duplication, take into account information that is already available to them by other means, in particular as regards credit institutions. Member States should ensure that notification requirements to competent authorities in respect of a credit portfolio once such portfolio has been transferred to a credit purchaser remain the responsibility of the credit servicer.

(38)The Action Plan recognised that credit institutions’ data infrastructure would be strengthened by having uniform and standardised data for non-performing credit agreements. The EBA has developed data templates that provide information about credit exposures in the banking book and allow potential buyers to evaluate the value of the credit agreements and carry out their due diligence. On the one hand, applying such data templates to credit agreements would reduce information asymmetries between potential buyers and sellers of credit agreements and, thus, contribute to the development of a functioning secondary market in the Union. On the other hand, where such data templates are excessively detailed, they can generate an excessive burden for credit institutions without any appreciable gain in information terms. Therefore, the EBA should carry out a review of the data templates with a view to further developing them into implementing technical standards for credit institutions. Credit institutions should be required to use the data templates for transfers of non-performing credit agreements, including transfers to other credit institutions. That obligation should apply to transfers of non-performing credit agreements only, and does not encompass complex transactions where non-performing credit agreements are included as a part of such a transaction, including sales of branches, sales of business lines or sales of clients’ portfolios not limited to non-performing credit agreements and transfers as part of an ongoing restructuring operation of the selling credit institution within insolvency, resolution or liquidation proceedings. In order to comply with the principle of proportionality, those information requirements should be applied to credit institutions in a proportionate manner having regard to the nature and size of the credits. At the same time, the extent of the obligation of credit institutions to comply with data templates should take into account the date of conclusion of the non-performing credit agreements. Other sellers of credit agreements should be able to use those standards in order to facilitate the valuation of credit agreements for sale. In addition, in the case of securitisation transactions, where mandatory transparency templates are provided for, any double reporting as a result of this Directive should be avoided.

(39)The Commission should be empowered to adopt implementing technical standards, developed by the EBA, in order to specify the templates to be used by credit institutions for the provision of information required under this Directive. The Commission should adopt those implementing technical standards by means of implementing acts pursuant to Article 291 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union and in accordance with Article 15 of Regulation (EU) No 1093/2010.

(40)As credit purchasers are not creating new credit but, instead, and as provided in this Directive, are buying only existing non-performing credit agreements at own risk, they do not cause prudential concerns and their potential contribution to systemic risk is negligible. It is therefore not justified to require credit purchasers to apply for an authorisation but it is however important that Union and national consumer protection rules continue to apply and the borrowers’ rights continue to be those arising from the initial credit agreement.

(41)Third-country credit purchasers might make it harder for Union borrowers to rely on their rights under Union law and for national authorities to supervise the enforcement of non-performing credit agreements. Credit institutions might also be discouraged from transferring such non-performing credit agreements to third-country credit purchasers because of the reputational risk involved. To the extent that the representative of a third-country purchaser of credits granted to natural persons, including consumers and independent workers, or of credits granted to micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) is not a credit institution, or a non-credit institution supervised by a competent authority of a Member State in accordance with Directive 2008/48/EC or with Directive 2014/17/EU, or a credit servicer authorised in the Union, that representative should appoint such an entity in order to ensure that the same standards of borrowers’ rights are preserved after the transfer of the non-performing credit agreement.

(42)Moreover, in order to better ensure that the same standards of consumers’ rights are preserved after the transfer of a non-performing credit agreement, a credit purchaser domiciled in the Union, or that has its registered office or, if under its national law it has no registered office, its head office in the Union should also be required to appoint a credit institution, or a non-credit institution supervised by a competent authority of a Member State in accordance with Directive 2008/48/EC or with Directive 2014/17/EU, or a credit servicer, to perform credit servicing activities in respect of non-performing credit agreements concluded with consumers.

(43)Host Member States should be able to extend the obligation to appoint a credit servicer in relation to other credit agreements. In cases where the transfer of a credit portfolio includes both credit agreements with consumers, other natural persons or SMEs for which the appointment of a credit institution, or of a non-credit institution supervised by a competent authority of a Member State in accordance with Directive 2008/48/EC or with Directive 2014/17/EU, or of a credit servicer, is required and simultaneously includes also other credit agreements for which no such appointment is required, the credit purchaser or, where applicable, its representative should comply with the appointment obligation in respect of credit agreements with consumers, other natural persons or SMEs. The credit servicer and the credit purchaser should comply with applicable Union and national law, and the national authorities in individual Member States should be given the necessary powers to effectively supervise their activity.

(44)When a credit purchaser, or its representative designated in accordance with this Directive, is required to appoint a credit servicer, or a credit institution, or a non-credit institution supervised by a competent authority of a Member State in accordance with Directive 2008/48/EC or with Directive 2014/17/EU, and opts to manage and enforce itself the rights and obligations related to a creditor’s rights under a non-performing credit agreement, or the non-performing credit agreement itself, the credit purchaser, or its representative designated in accordance with this Directive, is considered to be a credit servicer, and should therefore be authorised under this Directive.

(45)Credit purchasers that use the services of credit servicers, or of credit institutions, or of non-credit institutions supervised by a competent authority of a Member State in accordance with Directive 2008/48/EC or with Directive 2014/17/EU, should inform the competent authorities of their home Member State thereof so as to allow relevant competent authorities to exercise their supervisory powers as regards the conduct of the credit servicer, or of the credit institution, or of the non-credit institution supervised by a competent authority of a Member State in accordance with Directive 2008/48/EC or with Directive 2014/17/EU, vis-à-vis the borrower. Credit purchasers should also inform in a timely manner the competent authorities in charge of their supervision if they engage a different credit servicer, credit institution, or non-credit institution supervised by a competent authority of a Member State in accordance with Directive 2008/48/EC or with Directive 2014/17/EU.

(46)Credit purchasers that enforce the purchased credit agreement directly should do so in compliance with the law applicable to the credit agreement, including consumer protection rules applicable to the borrower. National rules concerning in particular the enforcement of contracts, consumer protection and criminal law continue to apply and competent authorities should ensure compliance of those credit purchasers with such rules on Member States’ territory.

(47)In order to facilitate the enforcement of the obligations set out in this Directive, where a credit purchaser is not domiciled in the Union, or does not have its registered office or, if under its national law it has no registered office, its head office in the Union, national law transposing this Directive should provide that, where a transfer of a credit agreement is concluded, a third-country credit purchaser designates a representative that is domiciled in the Union, or that does have its registered office or, if under its national law it has no registered office, its head office in the Union, mandated to be addressed by the competent authorities in addition to or instead of the credit purchaser. That representative is responsible for the obligations imposed on credit purchasers by this Directive without prejudice to obligations imposed on credit servicers. Credit purchasers transferring non-performing credit agreements should inform the competent authority of the home Member State, on a biannual basis and on an aggregated level, of at least the aggregate outstanding balance of the transferred credit portfolios, as well as the number and size of the credits included, and whether the transfer includes credit agreements concluded with consumers. For each portfolio transferred in a single transaction, the information provided should include the legal entity identifier (LEI) of the credit purchaser, or where applicable of its representative in the Union, or, where not available, the identity and address of the credit purchaser and, where applicable, of its representative in the Union. Competent authorities should be able to require that the information be provided on a quarterly basis instead, whenever they consider it necessary, including due to the high number of transactions during a crisis period.

(48)At present, different authorities are entrusted with the authorisation and supervision of credit servicers and credit purchasers in Member States, and therefore it is essential that Member States clarify the role of such authorities and allocate adequate powers, especially as they might need to supervise entities engaged in providing services in other Member States. In order to ensure efficient and proportionate supervision across the Union, Member States should grant the necessary powers for competent authorities to carry out their duties under this Directive, including the power to obtain necessary information, to investigate possible infringements of this Directive, to handle borrowers’ complaints and to impose administrative penalties and remedial measures, including the withdrawal of authorisations. Where such administrative penalties and remedial measures are applied, Member States should ensure that competent authorities apply them in a proportionate manner and give reasons for their decisions and that, in addition, those decisions should be subject to judicial review including in cases where competent authorities do not act within the timeframes provided.

(49)The provisions concerning infringements of this Directive are without prejudice to a Member State’s right to intervene in cases of infringements of national law relating to, for example, consumer protection, to borrowers’ rights, or to criminal activities. In such cases, the competent authorities of the host Member State and of the Member State where the credit was granted are the ones competent to decide whether there has been an infringement of national law and thus their powers are not limited by this Directive.

(50)Since the performance of secondary markets for credit will depend to a large extent on the good reputation of the entities involved, credit servicers should establish an efficient mechanism by which to treat complaints from borrowers. Member States should ensure that the authorities competent for the supervision of credit purchasers and credit servicers have effective and accessible procedures to deal with borrowers’ complaints.

(51)Both Regulations (EU) 2016/679 (16) and (EU) 2018/1725 (17) of the European Parliament and of the Council apply to the processing of personal data for the purposes of this Directive. In particular, where personal data is processed for the purposes of this Directive, the precise purpose should be specified, the relevant legal basis referred to, the relevant security requirements laid down in Regulation (EU) 2016/679 complied with, and the principles of necessity, proportionality, purpose limitation, and transparent and proportionate data retention period respected. For those purposes, an industry-wide code of conduct, in accordance with Article 40 of Regulation (EU) 2016/679, is preferred. Also, personal data protection by design and data protection by default should be embedded in all data processing systems developed and used within the framework of this Directive. Equally, administrative cooperation and mutual assistance between the competent authorities of the Member States should be compatible with the rules on the protection of personal data laid down in Regulation (EU) 2016/679, and in accordance with national data protection rules implementing Union law.

(52)In order to ensure a high level of consumer protection, Union and national law provide for a number of rights and safeguards related to credit agreements granted to a consumer. Those rights and safeguards apply in particular to the negotiation and conclusion of the credit agreement, to the use of unfair business-to-consumer commercial practices as laid down in Directive 2005/29/EC and to the performance or default of the credit agreement. That is notably the case in relation to long-term consumer credit agreements falling within the scope of Directive 2014/17/EU, in respect of the right of the consumer to discharge fully or partially the consumer’s obligations under a credit agreement prior to the expiry of that credit agreement or to be informed by means of the European Standardised Information Sheet, where applicable, on the possible transfer of the credit agreement to a credit purchaser. Borrower rights should also not be altered if the transfer of the credit agreement between a credit institution and a credit purchaser takes the form of contract novation. As a general principle, it should be ensured that borrowers are not worse off following the transfer of their credit agreement from a credit institution to a credit purchaser. This Directive should not prevent Member States from applying stricter provisions in order to protect borrowers.

(53)Without prejudice to other obligations under Directives 2008/48/EC and 2014/17/EU, and in order to ensure a high level of consumer protection, those Directives should be amended, to ensure that the consumer is presented, in due time and prior to any modifications to the terms and conditions of the credit agreement, with a clear and comprehensive list of any such changes, the timescale for their implementation and the necessary details as well as the name and address of the national authority to which the consumer is able to lodge a complaint.

(54)The information regarding the modification of the terms and conditions of a credit agreement under Directives 2008/48/EC and 2014/17/EU, as introduced by the amendments set out in this Directive, should not affect any consumer rights laid down in Directives 2008/48/EC and 2014/17/EU, including information rights.

(55)The importance placed by the Union legislator on the protection provided for consumers in Council Directive 93/13/EEC (18) and in Directives 2008/48/EC and 2014/17/EU, means that the assignment of a creditor’s rights under a credit agreement, or of the credit agreement itself, to a credit purchaser should not affect the level of protection granted by Union law to consumers in any way. Credit purchasers and credit servicers should therefore comply with applicable Union and national law as applicable to the initial credit agreement and the borrower should retain the same level of protection as provided under applicable Union and national law or as determined by Union or national conflict of law rules. Member States should ensure that no costs related to the transfer of the credit agreement, other than those already included in that credit agreement, are charged to the borrower. As regards charges on consumers in the event of default, amendments should be introduced to Directive 2008/48/EC requiring Member States to follow the same rules as in Directive 2014/17/EU on the placing of caps on fees and penalties.

(56)In respect of consumers, Directives 2008/48/EC and 2014/17/EU should be amended by this Directive to establish that Member States should require creditors to have adequate policies and procedures so that they make efforts to exercise, where appropriate, reasonable forbearance before foreclosure proceedings are initiated. Account should be taken of the EBA Guidelines on arrears and foreclosure of 19 August 2015, of the EBA Guidelines on management of non-performing and forborne exposures of 31 October 2018 and of the ECB Guidance to banks on non-performing loans of March 2017. When deciding which forbearance measures to take, creditors should take into account the individual circumstances of the consumer, the consumer’s interests and rights and the consumer’s ability to repay the credit, including in particular if the credit agreement is secured by residential immovable property that is the consumer’s primary residence. Forbearance measures should be able to consist of certain concessions to the consumer, such as a total or partial refinancing of a credit agreement, or a modification of its existing terms and conditions including, among others, an extension of its term, a change of the type of credit agreement, a deferral of payment of all or part of the instalment repayment for a period, a change of interest rate, an offer of a payment holiday, partial repayments, currency conversions, partial forgiveness and debt consolidation. Member States should have appropriate forbearance measures in place at national level. The list of forbearance measures provided in this Directive, as amendments to Directives 2008/48/EC and 2014/17/EU, is not exhaustive, and therefore Member States remain free to provide for additional measures. Likewise, it is open to Member States not to provide for a specific measure if so foreseen at national level, as long as a reasonable number of measures remains available. Where after foreclosure proceedings outstanding debt remains, Member States should ensure the protection of minimum living conditions and put in place measures to facilitate debt repayment while avoiding long-term over-indebtedness. At least where the price obtained for the residential immovable property affects the amount owed by the consumer, Member States should encourage creditors to take reasonable steps to obtain the best efforts price for the foreclosed residential immovable property in the context of market conditions. Member States should not prevent the parties to a credit agreement from expressly agreeing that the transfer of the security to the creditor is sufficient in order to repay the credit, in particular when the credit is secured by the consumer’s primary residence.

(57)In order to ensure that the level of protection of the consumer is not affected in the event of an assignment to a third party of the creditor’s rights under a mortgage credit agreement or of the credit agreement itself, an amendment to Directive 2014/17/EU should be introduced to establish that, in cases of a transfer of credit covered by that Directive, the consumer is entitled to plead against the credit purchaser any defence which was available to the consumer as against the original creditor and to be informed of the assignment.

(58)In accordance with the Joint Political Declaration of 28 September 2011 of Member States and the Commission on explanatory documents (19), Member States have undertaken to accompany, in justified cases, the notification of their transposition measures with one or more documents explaining the relationship between the components of a directive and the corresponding parts of national transposition instruments. With regard to this Directive, the Union legislator considers the transmission of such documents to be justified.

(59)The European Data Protection Supervisor was consulted in accordance with Article 42(1) of Regulation (EU) 2018/1725 and delivered an opinion on 24 January 2019.

(60)The efficient functioning of this Directive should be reviewed by the Commission, as the establishment of an internal secondary market for non-performing credit agreements with a high level of consumer protection progresses. The Commission is well placed to analyse specific cross-border issues that cannot be identified or properly addressed by individual Member States, such as the risk of money laundering and terrorist financing that could arise in relation to credit servicing and credit purchasers’ activities and the cooperation between competent authorities from different Member States. It is therefore appropriate that in its review of this Directive the Commission should also include a thorough assessment of the money laundering and terrorist financing risks associated with the activities performed by credit servicers and credit purchasers and the administrative cooperation between competent authorities.

(61)Since the objectives of this Directive, namely, to enhance the development of secondary markets for NPLs in the Union while ensuring further strengthened protection of borrowers, in particular of consumers, cannot be sufficiently achieved by the Member States but can rather, by reason of its scale and effects, be better achieved at Union level, the Union may adopt measures, in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity as set out in Article 5 of the Treaty on European Union. In accordance with the principle of proportionality as set out in that Article, this Directive does not go beyond what is necessary in order to achieve those objectives,