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FAQ on purchases of corporate sector debt instruments under the Eurosystem’s monetary policy purchase programmes

Updated on 13 February 2024

On 15 June 2023 the Governing Council decided to discontinue reinvestments under the asset purchase programme (APP) as of July 2023. On 14 December 2023 the Governing Council announced that it intends to continue to reinvest, in full, the principal payments from maturing securities, including corporate debt instruments, purchased under the PEPP during the first half of 2024 and to reduce the PEPP portfolio by €7.5 billion per month on average over the second half of the year. At the same time, the Governing Council announced that it intends to discontinue reinvestments under the PEPP at the end of 2024. The considerations outlined in this FAQ continue to apply to any corporate bonds that can be purchased under the PEPP.

Eligibility criteria

Q1.1 What are the minimum and maximum maturities of corporate sector debt instruments eligible for purchase?

In order to qualify for purchase under the corporate sector purchase programme (CSPP), debt instruments must have either (i) an initial maturity of 365/366 days or less and a minimum remaining maturity of 28 days at the time they are bought, or (ii) an initial maturity of 367 days or more, a minimum remaining maturity of six months and a maximum remaining maturity of less than 31 years (i.e. purchases of securities with a remaining maturity of 30 years and 364 days are possible) at the time they are bought. The upper limit is in line with that applied to the public sector purchase programme (PSPP). The lower limit ensures that assets issued by small and medium-sized corporations are also part of the universe of eligible debt instruments.

Q1.2 What is the minimum issuance volume of corporate sector debt instruments eligible for purchase?

There is no minimum issuance volume for corporate bonds eligible for purchase under the CSPP. This ensures that corporate bonds with small issuance volumes (often ones issued by small firms) can also be purchased. To be eligible for purchase, a commercial paper security must have a minimum outstanding issuance amount of €10 million.

Q1.3 Can the Eurosystem buy debt instruments with negative yields? Is there any minimum yield for the purchases?

Purchases of eligible debt instruments with a negative yield to maturity are permissible. Purchases below the deposit facility rate are also permissible in the asset purchase programmes (APP) to the extent necessary. The Governing Council decided in January 2017 that purchases of assets with yields below the deposit facility rate could take place under the PSPP to the extent necessary. On 12 September 2019 the Governing Council decided to extend this possibility to the private sector parts of the APP, specifically the third covered bond purchase programme (CBPP3), the asset-backed securities purchase programme (ABSPP) and the CSPP.

Q1.4 How do you treat a debt instrument if it has two or more ratings? Which rating applies?

In accordance with the practice followed under its collateral framework, the Eurosystem considers only credit assessments provided for the issue, issuer or guarantor by credit rating agencies (i.e. external credit assessment institutions (ECAIs)) which are eligible under the Eurosystem credit assessment framework (ECAF).

The use of these ratings is outlined in Articles 83 and 84 of Guideline ECB/2014/60. Article 84 specifies that an issue rating has priority over issuer or guarantor ratings. In general, the first-best rating must have a minimum credit assessment of credit quality step 3 (currently equivalent to an ECAI rating of BBB-/Baa3/BBBL. The equivalent short-term ratings are A-2/P-2/F3/R2-L) under the ECAF. Guarantor ratings are considered only in cases where the guarantee complies with the requirements set out in Part Four of Guideline ECB/2014/60.

Q1.5 Will the Eurosystem sell its holdings of debt instruments if they lose eligibility?

The Eurosystem may choose to, but is not required to, sell its holdings in the event of a loss of eligibility, e.g. a downgrade below the credit quality rating requirement.

Q1.6 In what way, if any, are debt instruments issued by car manufacturing companies eligible for purchase, given that many of those companies have “internal banks”?

As long as no parent of the issuer of the debt instrument is a bank, the issuer fulfils the non-bank criterion. If the issuer has a subsidiary that is a bank, the issuer will not be excluded under this criterion. Consequently, the Eurosystem can buy such an issuer’s debt instruments if all other eligibility criteria are met.

Q1.7 The press release on the CSPP refers to “bonds issued by non-bank corporations”. What exactly does this mean? Are debt instruments issued by insurers eligible for purchase?

For a corporate sector debt instrument to be eligible for purchase, the issuer should not be a credit institution or have any parent undertaking (as defined in Article 4(15) of the Capital Requirements Regulation) which is a credit institution (as defined in Article 2(14) of Guideline ECB/2014/60). Insurers that fulfil these criteria are eligible issuers.

Q1.8 The press release on the CSPP refers to “bonds issued by non-bank corporations established in the euro area”. Which criteria does the ECB use to decide whether an issuer is established in the euro area? Can debt instruments issued by non-euro area companies that have issued debt in the euro area also be purchased?

Debt instruments issued by issuers incorporated in the euro area are eligible for purchase.

In practical terms, this means that issuers must be euro area residents. The location of incorporation of the issuer’s ultimate parent is not taken into consideration in this eligibility criterion. Thus, corporate debt instruments issued by corporations incorporated in the euro area but whose ultimate parent is not established in the euro area are eligible for purchase, provided that they fulfil all other eligibility criteria.

Q1.9 Can you provide some more details on what the Eurosystem considers to be a “bank” for the purposes of the CSPP, and hence an ineligible issuer?

For a corporate sector debt instrument to be eligible for purchase under the CSPP, the issuer should not be a credit institution or have any parent undertaking (as defined in Article 4(1)(15) of the Capital Requirements Regulation which is a credit institution (as defined in Article 2(15) of Guideline ECB/2014/60).

In addition, the issuer of the debt instruments:

  1. may not have a parent company which is subject to banking supervision outside the euro area;
  2. may not be a supervised entity as defined in Article 2(2) of Regulation (EU) No 468/2014 of the European Central Bank (ECB/2014/17) or a member of a supervised group as defined in Article 2(21) of Regulation (EU) No 468/2014 (ECB/2014/17), in each case as contained in the list published by the ECB on its website in accordance with Article 49(1) of Regulation (EU) No 468/2014 (ECB/2014/17), and may not be a subsidiary, as defined in Article 4(1)(16) of Regulation (EU) No 575/2013, of any of those supervised entities or supervised groups;
  3. may not be an investment firm within the meaning of Article 4(1)(1) of Directive 2014/65/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council.

In practical terms, this means that corporate sector debt instruments issued by an entity which is supervised under the European banking supervision, as well as its subsidiaries, are not eligible for purchase under the CSPP. At the same time, in order to ensure a level playing field between euro area and foreign issuers, issuers with a parent company that is subject to banking supervision outside the euro area are also excluded.

Point (iii) means that entities that are comparable to banks in terms of their activities, e.g. the provision of one or more investment services to third parties and/or the performance of one or more investment activities on a professional basis according to the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II), but which are classified as MiFID investment firms from a legal perspective, are not eligible.

Q1.10 In order to be eligible for purchase under the CSPP, what is the required legal form for otherwise eligible international debt securities?

Admissible forms of international debt securities are specified in Article 66 of Guideline ECB/2014/60 and depend on whether the securities are issued in global bearer or global registered form. International debt securities issued in global registered form after 30 September 2010 must be issued under the new safekeeping structure for international debt instruments. International debt securities issued in global bearer form after 31 December 2006 must be issued in the form of new global notes and are to be deposited with a common safe keeper which is an ICSD or a CSD that operates an eligible SSS. International debt instruments in individual note form issued after 30 September 2010 are not eligible.

Q1.11 At the start of the CSPP, did certain PSPP-eligible agency issuers become eligible for the CSPP instead?

Yes. Following the Eurosystem’s systematic review of all public undertakings which comply with the PSPP and CSPP eligibility criteria, it has allocated public undertakings to one or the other of the two programmes. On the basis of this review, several agency issuers previously eligible for the PSPP instead became eligible for CSPP purchases. These issuers are: ENEL S.p.A., SNAM S.p.A., Terna S.p.A. – Rete Elettrica Nazionale, Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane S.p.A. and ENMC – Entidade Nacional para o Mercado de Combustíveis E.P.E.

Implementation aspects of the PSPP

Q1.12 What exactly do you define as a “public undertaking”?

The term “public undertaking” is understood in the sense of Article 8 of Council Regulation (EC) No 3603/93 of 13 December 1993. It defines “public undertaking” as any undertaking over which the state or other regional or local authorities may directly or indirectly exercise a dominant influence by virtue of their ownership of it, their financial participation therein or the rules which govern it. A dominant influence on the part of the public authorities is presumed when these authorities, directly or indirectly in relation to an undertaking: (a) hold the major part of the undertaking’s subscribed capital; (b) control the majority of the votes attaching to shares issued by the undertaking; or (c) can appoint more than half of the members of the undertaking’s administrative, managerial or supervisory body.

The Eurosystem will not publish a specific list of eligible issuers classified as “public undertakings”.

Q1.13 Which entities are considered to be an asset management vehicle or a national asset management and divestment fund established to support financial sector restructuring and/or resolution?

According to the eligibility requirements for purchases of corporate sector debt instruments, the issuer of a debt instrument cannot be an asset management vehicle (as defined in the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive and Single Resolution Mechanism Regulation) or a national asset management and divestment fund.

The latter category presently includes the following entities: Fondo de Reestructuración Ordenada Bancaria (FROB), Sociedad de Gestión de Activos Procedentes de la Reestructuración Bancaria (SAREB), National Asset Management Agency (NAMA), Parvalorem, Parparticipadas, Parups, Propertize, Družba za upravljanje terjatev bank (DUTB), HSH Portfoliomanagement AöR and HSH Finanzfonds AöR.

Q1.14 Which sustainability-linked debt instruments became eligible for purchases as of 2021?

For a debt instrument to be eligible for purchase, it must at a minimum fulfil the eligibility requirements set for Eurosystem collateral. With regard to sustainability-linked debt instruments, the following FAQ provides clarification on eligibility criteria.

Implementation of purchases

Q2.1 Can asset managers and non-bank financial institutions offer assets eligible for purchases under the APP and the PEPP?

Asset managers and non-bank financial institutions are not eligible counterparties. However, the Eurosystem offers its eligible counterparties the possibility to share offers of eligible securities on behalf of non-eligible counterparties, such as asset managers and non-bank financial institutions, under the Eurosystem’s monetary policy purchase programmes. Although final responsibility for the offered assets remains entirely with the eligible counterparties, they can include them in the daily inventories of assets that they share with the Eurosystem, either by explicitly reporting which assets are offered on behalf of non-eligible counterparties or aggregating them with their inventories. In periods of heightened investor uncertainty, such as during the coronavirus pandemic, this option can contribute to alleviating market tensions and supporting proper market functioning.

Q2.2 How can I find out more about the Eurosystem’s corporate bond holdings?

Details on CSPP-related corporate bond holdings are published on a weekly, monthly and semi-annual basis. They include aggregate data, such as total holdings, a breakdown of primary and secondary market purchases, and a breakdown by rating, country and sector. This information is made available in the context of the APP so that observers can gain an insight into the Eurosystem’s overall purchases. In addition, the ECB publishes a detailed list of CSPP corporate bond securities that are held by the Eurosystem, including the national central bank (NCB) that bought the security, the security’s maturity date and its coupon rate. See our FAQ for more information on disclosures related to the Eurosystem’s corporate security holdings under the PEPP.

Published CSPP holdings

Q2.3 Does the Eurosystem target or exclude specific industry sectors?

The eligibility of corporate debt instruments is guided by our monetary policy objective, taking into account appropriate financial risk management considerations. To ensure the effectiveness of monetary policy, the range of eligible debt instruments is deliberately broad.

As announced in July 2022, the Eurosystem aims to gradually decarbonise its corporate bond holdings, on a path aligned with the goals of the Paris Agreement. To that end, the Eurosystem tilts these purchases towards issuers with a better climate performance. Better climate performance is measured with reference to lower greenhouse gas emissions, more ambitious carbon reduction targets and better climate-related disclosures. For more information, please refer to the FAQ on incorporating climate change considerations into Eurosystem corporate bond purchases.

Moreover, the ECB shares the view that an awareness of environmental issues, together with ethical and socially responsible behaviour, are important for society and actively supports several initiatives in this context.

Q2.4 Who conducts the purchases?

Purchases of corporate sector debt instruments are carried out by six NCBs acting on behalf of the Eurosystem. The ECB coordinates the purchases. The NCBs conducting the purchases are: Nationale Bank van België/Banque Nationale de Belgique, Deutsche Bundesbank, Banco de España, Banque de France, Banca d’Italia and Suomen Pankki – Finlands Bank.

Market segments for purchases are allocated to the purchasing NCBs according to the geographical location of the issuer as follows:

NCB

Market segment

Nationale Bank van België/Banque Nationale de Belgique

BE, CY, GR, LU, MT, PT, NL4, SI and SK

Deutsche Bundesbank

DE and NL1

Banco de España

ES and NL2

Suomen Pankki ‒ Finlands Bank

AT, EE, FI, IE, LT, LV

Banque de France

FR

Banca d’Italia

IT and NL3

Note: The International Organization for Standardization’s “country of risk” concept, used here, applies a methodology based on four factors: management location, country of primary listing, country of revenue and reporting currency of the issuer.

1 Includes issuers with the Netherlands as the residence country and Germany as the country of risk.

2 Includes issuers with the Netherlands as the residence country and Spain as the country of risk.
3 Includes issuers with the Netherlands as the residence country and Italy as the country of risk.
4 Includes issuers with the Netherlands as the residence country and a country of risk other than Germany, Spain or Italy.

Q2.5 What information can counterparties reveal to their clients with regard to Eurosystem purchases?

Counterparties can communicate that the Eurosystem has been buying in the corporate space, the maturity bucket and the sector (e.g. utilities), but not the exact amounts, the issuers of the debt instruments purchased, the securities involved or the Eurosystem member involved.

Q2.6 Does the Eurosystem purchase in the primary market?

As of March 2023, with the start of the period of partial reinvestment, only securities of issuers with a better climate performance and green bonds that comply with a stringent identification process will continue to be purchased in the primary market. Therefore, primary market purchases of any other eligible securities were phased out prior to the start of partial reinvestments, i.e. the Eurosystem no longer purchases such securities in the primary market as of March 2023.

Furthermore, for debt instruments issued by public undertakings, no primary market purchases take place, as such purchases are forbidden owing to the prohibition on monetary financing laid down in Article 123 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.

Q2.7 Does the Eurosystem apply any measures to mitigate potential negative effects on secondary market liquidity?

When conducting purchases, the Eurosystem is mindful of the potential impact of its purchases on market liquidity. When buying in the secondary market, it considers, among other things, the scarcity of specific debt instruments and general market conditions, i.e. with a certain degree of flexibility to also take into account seasonal differences. Furthermore, corporate bond holdings that meet the minimum credit quality requirement are also available for securities lending by the relevant purchasing national central banks, who publish a list of the individual corporate bonds available for lending on a weekly basis without revealing the size of their holdings in each corporate bond.

Securities lending under the APP and the PEPP

Q2.8 Can the Eurosystem participate in private placements?

As of March 2023 the Eurosystem cannot participate in private placements.

Q2.9 Will income and losses be shared within the Eurosystem?

In general, income and losses from decentralised monetary policy operations conducted by the Eurosystem are shared. Purchases of corporate sector debt instruments are subject to a full income and loss sharing regime.

Limits and risks

Q3.1 Are there any limits on corporate bond holdings per issue or per issuer group?

The Eurosystem applies a maximum issue share limit of 70% per corporate bond on the basis of the outstanding amount. Lower issue share limits apply in specific cases, for example for corporate bonds issued by public undertakings, which are dealt with in a manner consistent with their treatment under the PSPP. In relation to public undertakings, the Eurosystem is bound by the monetary financing prohibition laid down in Article 123 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.

The Eurosystem applies additional limits per issuer group, following a pre-defined internal benchmark, to ensure a diversified allocation of purchases across issuers, while allowing for sufficient leeway to build up the portfolio. See our FAQ for more information on the limits applicable to commercial paper purchases.

Q3.2 How is an “issuer group” defined?

An issuer group is defined as a group of companies that operate as a single economic entity and constitute a single reporting entity for the purposes of presenting consolidated accounts. The issuer group consists of the parent company and all of its direct and indirect subsidiaries.

Q3.3 What are the risks of the programmes and are there any plans to mitigate them? Will the Eurosystem be monitoring the creditworthiness of the companies behind its bond purchases?

As with any diversified portfolio of credit instruments, risks from the deterioration of issuers’ credit quality or from issuer defaults cannot be entirely excluded. At the same time, the risks of the programme are kept low in particular by (i) setting minimum credit quality criteria at the time of purchase, (ii) ensuring diversification through issuer group limits, and (iii) by implementing appropriate due diligence procedures and credit risk mitigation measures on an ongoing basis. The Eurosystem will employ other differentiated measures, such as maturity limits for lower-scoring issuers, to mitigate its climate-related financial risk, as stated in the climate change related FAQ. The Eurosystem may also apply additional risk management measures as deemed necessary.

Q3.4 What does “market capitalisation” mean in the context of the pre-defined internal benchmark?

The term “market capitalisation”, which is relevant in the context of the pre-defined internal benchmark, refers to the nominal outstanding amount of eligible corporate bonds issued by the issuer in question as a share of the entire eligible universe.

The construction of the benchmark is further complemented by climate change considerations. This allows the Eurosystem to tilt its corporate bond purchases towards issuers with a better climate performance. For more details on the tilting of Eurosystem corporate bond purchases, see the dedicated FAQ.