Challenging a bank’s license withdrawal by the ECB: can the bank act or can its shareholders?
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| Publication date | 02-05-2019 |
| Publisher | European Law Blog |
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| Abstract |
Pending before the European Court of Justice (ECJ) is a core issue of legal protection against European Union (EU) acts – can a bank itself challenge the withdrawal of its license by the European Central Bank (ECB) even when the powers of the bank’s board have been taken over by a liquidator, or can the shareholders act for the bank or, alternatively, for the protection of their own interests?
Three years since the ECB withdrew the license of a Latvian bank, Trasta Komercbanka, in March 2016, this issue of effective judicial protection is at the centre of proceedings[1] in which the Advocate General (AG)’s Opinion is just out. This post sketches the background to the on-going proceedings and summarises the AG’s Opinion, highlighting the issue of contestation of withdrawal of a bank’s license: who can challenge the ECB in court: the bank’s board, side-lined by the liquidator, or its shareholders? |
| Document type | Web publication or website |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.21428/9885764c.966b8611 |
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(Final published version)
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