Martino E. (2026), EU Bank Governance and Bail-In. A Legal and Financial Analysis on the Role of Long-Term Creditors (Palgrave Macmillan - EBI Studies in Banking and Capital Markets Law series) (Forthcoming)
Martino E. (2025), Research Handbook in Comparative Financial Regulation (eds, Elgar - Research Handbooks in Comparative Law Series) With A M Pacces and H Nabilou
ABSTRACT
Comparative Financial Regulation investigates the key drivers of divergence and convergence in financial regulation and analyses the consequences in terms of market efficiency, investor protection and financial stability. It adopts a broad view of the financial system and promotes a functional understanding of the regulation of securities markets, banks, derivatives and payments.
Emphasising the importance of a comparative approach to financial regulation, contributing authors present critical examinations across a variety of national jurisdictions in Asia, the Americas and Europe, going beyond the black-letter comparison of different national regulatory regimes. They present a comprehensive overview of how the level of cross-border convergence and divergence varies across sectors of the financial system. Chapters cover the latest regulatory developments related to blockchain and sustainable finance, and explore how sectors of the financial system are adapting to current challenges, such as geopolitical risk, climate change and cyber warfare.
Providing analytical tools to understand and interpret financial regulation, this Research Handbook is invaluable to students and academics in comparative law, finance and banking law, financial economics, and regulation and governance. It is also an important resource for practitioners in the field.
Martino E. D. (2025) Fixing CoCos in Bank Prudential Regulation - A Life-Cycle Approach. European Business Organization Law Review (forthcoming) [with T Vos]
ABSTRACT
Contingent Convertible Bonds (CoCos) were introduced in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis as a key prudential tool intended to facilitate loss absorption in going concern, thereby enhancing bank resilience. Yet, more than a decade after their regulatory inception, CoCos have largely failed to deliver on that promise.
This paper develops a novel model that adopts a holistic, life-cycle approach to CoCos to explain their functional limitations. By analysing the strategic interactions among banks, investors, and regulators, we show that banks have strong incentives to structure CoCos in ways that reduce the likelihood of early loss absorption; and that regulators simultaneously often operate under constraints that delay activation of these instruments until bank resolution becomes unavoidable. The outcome is clear: although the regulatory framework treats CoCos as going-concern instruments, in practice they function primarily in gone-concern scenarios.
Our analysis has significant implications for the design of prudential regulation and the broader legal framework that underpins financial stability. On a systemic level, it highlights the need to view prudential regulation dynamically—across the full life-cycle of financial instruments and institutional risk. As to CoCos more specifically, our findings reveal a critical misalignment of incentives that amounts to a structural flaw in the current prudential framework. Immediate corrective action is needed. Reforming the trigger mechanism is essential to restore CoCos’ capacity to absorb losses while banks remain going concerns.
Keywords: Contingent Convertibles; Financial Stability; Early Intervention; Contractual Design
JEL Classification: G21; K22; K23
Martino E. D. (2025), Property without the Law. Yale Journal on Regulation (forthcoming) [with S Bechtold, G Dari-Mattiacci and G Parchomovsky]
ABSTRACT
Emerging technologies for the automatic enforcement of contracts, conventionally referred to as smart contracts, have the potential to realize Professor Alan Schwartz’ ideal of an efficient contract law for sophisticated parties, as they reduce the cost of textualist enforcement, added contingencies, and privately-provided templates, and offer a way to get around mandatory rules relating to such matters as contract modifications, penalty clauses, and substantial performance.
They also enable contracting parties to create personalized property rights free of legal restraints. Through automatic enforcement, a contract term can be directly included in contracts with subsequent transferees of the asset. Smart contracts thus turn mere contractual rights into de facto property rights that “run with the (digital) asset.” Breach is made impossible by the very nature of the automatic enforcement system, and notice is assured by distributed and readily accessible ledgers. Compared to traditional property rights, these “property-without-law” rights are more easily customizable ex ante . as they are not bound by the numerus clausus principle . and stronger ex post . because courts cannot modulate enforcement. We document this phenomenon, explore its potential and vulnerabilities, discuss examples in intellectual property, real estate, organizations, and financial contracts, and re-examine the role of property law in a world where technology, rather than law, turns promises into assets.
Keywords: property, contracts, numerus clausus, privity, notice, blockchain, smart contracts.
JEL Classification: K11, K12.
Martino E. D. (2025), Tokenizing Property. Comparative Law Review (forthcoming) [with V Zerba]
Martino E. D., (2025) Rescued Banks back to the market? European Company and Financial Law Review 22(2), 1 [with A Perini]
ABSTRACT
The key policy objective of the post-financial crisis is to ban bailouts, especially for solvent banks. Precautionary recapitalization is an instrument of flexibility in the post-financial crisis regulatory framework that allows solvent but undercapitalized banks to receive capital aids under strict conditions, including the temporary nature of the aid. However, this instrument confronts a credibility issue as the public ownership of financial institutions persists several years after the use of precautionary recapitalizations.
We analyze the legal and economic reasons that make the temporary nature of precautionary recapitalizations de facto unenforceable, proposing an analytical framework to approach the matter. In so doing, we challenge the consensus approach to the design of public interventions in banking, which focuses on the trade-offs between minimizing ex-ante moral hazard of bankers, preserving financial stability, and protecting taxpayers. We show that this approach is incomplete as it overlooks the ex-post effects of the intervention, jeopardizing its ex-ante credibility as well. Against this backdrop, we examine the implementation of precautionary recapitalization in the cases of National Bank of Greece, Piraeus Bank, and Monte dei Paschi di Siena.
The analysis identifies the key factors undermining the temporary nature of the recapitalizations; specifically, the assessment of the bank’s solvency, the timing of recapitalization, the type of instruments employed, and the political economy of the recapitalization process. Finally, we briefly confront our findings with the Commission’s Crisis Management and Deposit Insurance (CMDI) proposal. We show that the CMDI wants to address the symptoms rather than the causes when reforming precautionary recapitalization, proposing an overly rigid system that is prone to abuses and political distortions.
Keywords: banking, precautionary recapitalization, bank crisis, State aid, bank resolution, CMDI
JEL Classification: G21, G28, K29
Martino E. D. (2025), Containing Runs on Solvent Banks Prioritizing recovery over resolution. Journal of Financial Crises, 7(1) [with E Perotti]
ABSTRACT
The sudden banking defaults in the spring of 2023 proved current prudential norms insufficient to prevent bank distress. Capital and liquidity norms need to be adjusted. The experience also shows how a lack of credible supervisory tools led to forbearance and finally chaotic public bailouts. An intervention gap arises when viable but undercapitalized banks are at the mercy of runs. Once outflows start to escalate, all that is left is to prepare for resolution and assign losses. We call for new Pillar II – i.e. activated by the supervisor – stabilizing measures, as contingent capital and liquidity tools.
A timely recapitalization option requires stronger supervisory powers to activate a timely going-concern recapitalization, such as by equity conversion of additional Tier 1 contingent convertible debt. One contingent liquidity measure is the automatic activation of redemption charges upon large outflows of uninsured deposits. The goal is to interrupt any self-fulfilling expectation of further outflows. The measure mirrors new US Securities and Exchange Commission norms created for institutional money market funds, the natural benchmark for uninsured corporate deposits. The combination creates a framework for credible interim intervention and a chance to steer solvent banks toward recovery early on rather than settling for forbearance and increasing the probability of resolution and bailouts.
Keywords: bank resolution, bank recovery, contingent capital, redemption charges
JEL Classification: G21, G33, K20
Martino E (2025), The Social Cost of Blockchain. Externalities, Allocation of Property Rights and the Role of Law, European Journal of Risk Regulation, 1 [With G W Ringe]
ABSTRACT
The sudden banking defaults in the spring of 2023 proved current prudential norms insufficient to prevent bank distress. Capital and liquidity norms need to be adjusted. The experience also shows how a lack of credible supervisory tools led to forbearance and finally chaotic public bailouts. An intervention gap arises when viable but undercapitalized banks are at the mercy of runs. Once outflows start to escalate, all that is left is to prepare for resolution and assign losses. We call for new Pillar II – i.e. activated by the supervisor – stabilizing measures, as contingent capital and liquidity tools.
A timely recapitalization option requires stronger supervisory powers to activate a timely going-concern recapitalization, such as by equity conversion of additional Tier 1 contingent convertible debt. One contingent liquidity measure is the automatic activation of redemption charges upon large outflows of uninsured deposits. The goal is to interrupt any self-fulfilling expectation of further outflows. The measure mirrors new US Securities and Exchange Commission norms created for institutional money market funds, the natural benchmark for uninsured corporate deposits. The combination creates a framework for credible interim intervention and a chance to steer solvent banks toward recovery early on rather than settling for forbearance and increasing the probability of resolution and bailouts.
Keywords: bank resolution, bank recovery, contingent capital, redemption charges
JEL Classification: G21, G33, K20
Martino E. D., (2025) La natura temporanea delle ricapitalizzazioni precauzionali: teoria, prassi e prospettive future. Rivista di Diritto Bancario 2024(4), 1 [with A Perini]
ABSTRACT
La ricapitalizzazione precauzionale rappresenta uno strumento di flessibilità inserito nel quadro normativo post-crisi finanziaria, grazie al quale le banche solventi ma sottocapitalizzate possono ricevere aiuti pubblici nel rispetto di una serie di rigide condizioni. Tuttavia, questo strumento pone una sfida di credibilità dovuta a disposizioni poco articolate e a comportamenti opportunistici da parte degli Stati nazionali. In particolare, una questione cruciale ma poco indagata riguarda la persistenza della proprietà pubblica delle istituzioni finanziarie diversi anni dopo l'utilizzo delle ricapitalizzazioni precauzionali. Questo è il primo articolo a fornire un'analisi approfondita la questione. L’articolo si contrappone all’approccio tradizionale all’analisi degli interventi pubblici nel settore bancario, che considera i compromessi tra la minimizzazione dell'azzardo morale ex-ante dei banchieri, la conservazione della stabilità finanziaria e la protezione dei contribuenti. L’articolo dimostra come questo approccio sia incompleto in quanto trascura completamente l'effetto ex-post dell'intervento, che può comportare costi significativi. In questo contesto, l’articolo approfondisce l'attuale quadro giuridico della ricapitalizzazione precauzionale e fornisce un'analisi dettagliata della sua attuazione nei casi della Banca Nazionale di Grecia, della Banca del Pireo e del Monte dei Paschi di Siena. L'analisi identifica gli elementi chiave delle ricapitalizzazioni precauzionali, comprendendo la valutazione della solvibilità istituzionale, la tempistica della ricapitalizzazione, il tipo di strumenti utilizzati e gli aspetti più prettamente politici legati al processo di ricapitalizzazione, contribuendo alla dottrina che discute l'efficacia del quadro generale di vigilanza e risoluzione delle crisi bancarie dell'UE. Infine, il contributo confronta brevemente i risultati dell’analisi con le proposte di riforma in materia avanzate dalla Commissione nel quadro proposta Crisis Management and Deposit Insurance (CMDI). L’articolo conclude che riforma, come attualmente formulata, si tradurrebbe in uno strumento inutile a causa della sua rigidità o potenzialmente soggetto ad abusi a causa della potenziale interpretazione estensiva delle nuove norme. In entrambi i casi, non servirebbe allo scopo di avere uno strumento credibile ma flessibile per affrontare le crisi in modo preventivo.
Martino E. D. (2024), The Law of Algorithmic Stablecoins in Europe. Banking and Finance Law Review, 41(1), 75 [with Y Roos]
ABSTRACT
Algorithmic stablecoins are a specific subset of stablecoins employing algorithmic adjustments of supply and demand as the key stabilization mechanism. In the pursuit towards a fully decentralised means of payment, detached from collateral and solely stabilised by smart contracts and algorithms, algorithmic stablecoins pose unique risks and challenges due to their complex construction. This contribution explores the approach that is currently taken by regulators through exposing the unique risks posed by algorithmic stablecoins and arguing that these risks require a supplementary regulatory approach alongside existing proposals for regulation. We justify this by showing the complexity and diversity of fully algorithmic protocols and reveal where the dangers of these protocols originate. The article reviews the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCAR) and determines its limited applicability to algorithmic stablecoins through general provision and crypto asset service providers. It briefly considers an international comparison by exploring different regulatory proposals from outside the EU with the aim to draw lessons to better assess MiCAR effectiveness. We conclude that MiCAR, despite being the most advanced and encompassing legislation in the area of crypto activities, does not target the specific risks of algorithmic stablecoins. Moreover, it creates a complex and ambiguous system with regards to the provisions applicable to algorithmic stablecoins and puts forward rules that are difficult to adapt or update via secondary legislation leaving room for further exploration of the regulatory framework to ensure safety and stability.
Keywords: Algorithmic stablecoins, MiCAR, financial stability, digital currency, crypto asset
JEL Classification: G23, G28, K23
Martino E. D. (2024) Decentralised Autonomous Organizations: Targeting the Potential beyond the Hype, Law, Innovation and Technology, 16 (2), 392 [with O Borgogno]
ABSTRACT
Decentralised Autonomous Organisations (DAOs) aim at innovating the organisation forms for business activities. They are complex blockchain-based smart contracts, which allow token holders to participate directly in decision-making processes and decentralised entrepreneurial activities as much as possible. The advocates of this new kind of digital organisation argue that DAOs enjoy significant operational efficiencies and can effectively work outside of any legal recognition. This paper analyses DAOs through the lenses of the economic and legal theories on the firm and on business organisation. The analysis makes three contributions: first, it contributes to the literature on the theory of the firm, looking at the role of digital technology in innovating the organisation of business activities. Second, it enriches the literature on the legally recognised forms of business organisation, analysing the tension between the essential role of the law and the limitations of tamper-resistant technologies, such as the blockchain. Third, it overcomes the largely ideological and dichotomic debate on the promises of DAOs, providing analytical guidelines as to why current forms of sector-specific regulation fail to leverage the potential of DAOs.
Keywords: DAOs, decentralization, business organization, corporate governance, tokens
JEL Classification: K22, L22, G34
Martino E. D. (2024), Monetary Sovereignty in the Digital Era. Computer Law and Security Review, 52, 105909
ABSTRACT
The relationship between private and public money has shaped the economic and legal debate over money for centuries. Private money can either compete with or complement public money and this depends on the applicable law and the relative powers of the State and private parties. The rise of disruptive digital and cryptographic technologies applied to money creation has the potential to innovate this century-long debate.
This article proposes a framework to analyse the role of the law in the relation to the risks and benefits of having circulating private money competing with public money. Accordingly, the article highlights the unprecedented threat to monetary sovereignty, the risks to systemic stability and, ultimately, to democratic decision-making prompted by digital private money.
To counter these risks while seizing potential efficiency gains generated by novel forms of private money, the article proposes to regulate convertibility and fragment by regulation such a potentially global market.
Keywords: Monetary sovereignty, monetary competition, private money, stablecoins, optimal digital currency area
JEL Classification: E42; E44; G24
Martino E. D. (2023) Sfide digitali alla sovranità monetaria. Il ruolo del diritto nella governance del denaro digitale, Rivista di Diritto Bancario (4), 345
ABSTRACT
Il rapporto tra denaro pubblico e privato ha caratterizzato il dibattito economico e giuridico sul denaro per secoli. Il denaro privato può competere o integrare il denaro pubblico e ciò dipende dal diritto applicabile e dai poteri relativi dello Stato e delle parti private. L'ascesa di nuove tecnologie digitali e crittografiche applicate alla creazione di denaro ha il potenziale di innovare questo dibattito secolare.
Questo articolo propone un quadro analitico per analizzare il ruolo della legge in relazione ai rischi e ai benefici della circolazione di denaro privato in competizione con il denaro pubblico. Di conseguenza, l'articolo evidenzia la minaccia senza precedenti alla sovranità monetaria, i rischi per la stabilità finanziaria e, in ultima analisi, per il processo decisionale democratico, provocati dal denaro privato digitale.
Per contrastare questi rischi e cogliere al contempo i potenziali guadagni in termini di efficienza generati da nuove forme di denaro privato, l'articolo propone di regolamentare la convertibilità e di frammentare per via normativa un mercato potenzialmente globale.
Martino E.D. (2022) Risk Retention in Securitization and Empty Creditors. European Business Law Review, 33(5), 635 -670, [with Evgenia Chouliara]
ABSTRACT
The risk retention rule was introduced in the US and the EU as a mechanism to curb the originate-to-distribute model, associated with securitizations and the financial crisis of 2008. This paper argues that besides its original financial stability rationale, the rule has positive spillovers on debt governance and specifically on the incentives to monitor, the design of covenants and the lender’s stance during renegotiation and bankruptcy (the ‘empty creditor’ problem). Risk retention in true sale securitizations makes the strongest case for debt governance, although the existence of various options of retention appears to be associated with varying incentives. The mechanism and effects of risk retention on synthetic securitizations remain ambivalent, given the perverse incentives associated with over-insurance (negative economic ownership). However, the upcoming restriction of double hedging for synthetic STS transactions is a positive development.
Keywords: Law & Finance, Financial Regulation, Debt Governance, Securitization, Risk Retention
JEL Classification: G21, G38, K22
ABSTRACT
Shareholders are the residual claimants on the assets of a corporation. Creditors are fixed claimants whose interest lies in the solvency of the borrower. Consequently, shareholders are usually thought to have optimal incentives to maximise the value of the corporation. The article challenges this common wisdom and proposes to reform bank governance granting (some) ex-ante governance rights to bank creditors. This aims at fine-tuning bank governance and incumbent substantive regulation, in particular the resolution framework for distressed banks, and enhances the quality of bank decision-making in terms of risk-taking. At the same time, the proposed reform should increase the ex-ante credibility of resolution. The second part of the article operationalises this construct focusing on the specific case of the European Banking Union and discusses the design of the governance status of bail-inable creditors. The analysis demonstrates how bail-inable creditors can correct for shareholders’ perverse incentives and make debt governance work in banking. The policy proposal advanced in the paper would complement substantive regulation and prudential oversight. The governance role of creditors has the potential to be particularly helpful in preventing disproportionate risk-taking decisions in good times, when regulatory and supervisory standards are lax and systemic risk piles-up.
Keywords: Financial Stability, Bank Governance, Debt Governance, Voting Rights, Appointment Rights, Governance Arrangements
JEL Classification: G21, G38, K22
Martino E.D. (2021) Go Preventive or Go Home - A New Role of MREL. European Company and Financial Law Review, 18(4), 608-639. [with Katarzyna Parchimowicz]
ABSTRACT
Bank Resolution is considered a cornerstone of the post-crisis financial regulation; however, it is also widely considered ineffective and inefficient in handling bank failures. This article analyses the preventive potential of the resolution framework, specifically focusing on the minimum requirement for own funds and eligible liabilities (MREL).
We argue that MREL has a double nature. On the one hand, it should ensure the feasibility of resolution in case of a bank failure. On the other hand, it aims at restricting the funding model of banks, similarly to the other (preventive) capital requirements.
By analysing the 2019 reform of the EU banking regulation, we contend that MREL represents an important complement to the rest of the preventive regulatory framework and that the latest reform unleashes such potential. We demonstrate that the new rules on MREL determination and enforcement allows the resolution authority to look after the build-up of systemic risk. The analysis reveals that MREL can serve both micro- and macro-prudential purposes. Finally, we argue that the current institutional architecture represents the main impeding factor for the new regulation to efficiently work, curbing the positive preventive potential of MREL.
Keywords: law & finance, financial regulation, BRRDII, bank resolution; MREL, preventive regulation, macro-prudential regulation.
JEL Classification: G21; G28; K23
Martino E.D. (2021) Toward an Optimal Composition of Bail-inable Debt-holders? Journal of Corporate Law Studies. 21(2), 321–364.
ABSTRACT
The core insight of the new EU framework for bank resolution is to allocate losses to bank's insiders (bail-inable creditors). This affects both financial stability and the corporate governance of banks.
The current academic debate on bank resolution overlooks the relevance of identifying the investors in bail-inable securities (ie who is going to bear losses) and the role of counterparty risk. This article identifies the investors that are better suited to hold those instruments and highlights the trade-offs between the corporate governance role and the threat to financial stability posed by different investors.
The article demonstrates that the composition of bail-inable debtholders matters and shows – empirically and theoretically – a transition towards a desirable composition of holders; although a considerable room for improvement remains. This exercise deepens the understanding of the impact of the resolution framework and the importance of counterparties for its credibility and future applications.
Keywords: Bail-in, Corporate Governance, Financial Stability, Counterparties, Institutional Investors.
Martino, E. D. (2020). Shareholders Right Directive II: the Italian Implementation. Corporate Finance and Capital Market Law Review, 2-2020, 43-56. [with Pacces A M]
ABSTRACT
The revision of the Shareholders Rights Directive (“SRDII”) entered into force in 2017. The SRDII represents the landing point of a long process started in 2012 with the “Action Plan: European company law and corporate governance” drafted by the EU Commission.
Already in the Action plan, the two key objectives pursued by the European Legislator were clearly displayed: enhancing companies’ transparency and enhancing shareholders’ engagement. These objectives are, in turn, instrumental in attracting stock market funding, alleviating the dependence of European companies on bank funding.
This article discusses the implementation of the SRDII into the Italian legal system. The analysis discusses the main choices of the Italian legislation in implementing the SRDII rules and the coordination between these new rules and the Italian legal system, with specific reference to the general corporate law and the existing provisions on listed companies.
We analyse four main features of the SRDII:
1) Rules on shareholder identification. These may create more problems than they solve. In particular, these rules may slightly curb the incentives of activists to engage target companies, fearing the free-ride of other investors. The coordination with the existing Italian law may worsen the situation.
2) Rules on shareholder engagement. The Italian legislator provides Consob with interesting enforcement powers, close to a duty to demonstrate engagement. The Italian approach to the supervision of proxy advisors is also interesting, but likely ineffective because of the limited extraterritorial effect of the provisions.
3) Say-on-pay legislation. The biggest novelty is the binding vote on the Remuneration Policy. Moreover, the coordination may prove problematic between the implementation of SRD II and the existing Italian law on variable remuneration awarded through financial instruments.
4) Related-Party Transaction. The Italian legal system was ahead of its time in this regard. This can be explained by the peculiarities of Italian capitalism. The SRD II brought very few amendments to the existing regime. Notably, the definition of Related-Party has been widened and now directly refers to the international accounting principles (IAS 24).
Keywords: Company Law, Shareholders Right Directive, Say on Pay, Related Party Transaction, Shareholders Engagement, Italian Law, CONSOB
JEL Classification: G34, G38, K22
Martino, E.D. (2020). The Bail-in Beyond Unpredictability: Creditors’ Incentives and Market Discipline, 21(4) European Business Organization Law Review, 789-828. doi:
ABSTRACT
Market Discipline of creditors on risk taking behaviours of borrowing banks represents a long-lasting debate. Such a debate gained new attention after the post-crisis stream of reforms concerning resolution policy: creditors should be incentivized to take optimal effort in monitoring their borrowers and, at the same time, their interests have been aligned with the social ones. Many commentators criticized such an expectation especially in the European context, arguing that the lack of credibility and excessive complexity of the resolution mechanism impair the ability and willingness of creditors to exert disciplining role.
This paper aims at taking a step forward in this scientific debate, investigating whether the ability to exert disciplining activity is inherently impaired by the design of the Directive. In other words, this research wants to assess if, assuming an ideal environment, creditors would have optimal incentives to monitor bank’s behaviours and react accordingly. To do so, the paper reviews the literature on Market Discipline, then carries out a legal analysis of the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD), focusing on those norms shaping the market for bail-inable securities. Eventually, the incentives stemming from those norms are discussed, assuming an ideal environment where bail-in is certain and credible and the market for bail-inable securities works smoothly.
The analysis highlight that the incentives of creditors toward market discipline are inherently diluted by the BRRD legal design because of competing policy objectives pursued by the Directive. The direct normative consequence of such a finding is that enhancing information and predictability, though desirable in principle, will never lead to optimal monitoring effort, leaving the floor to alternative rule-based strategies.
Keywords: Law & Finance, Bank resolution, Bail-inable creditors, Market Discipline, No-Creditors-Worse-Off.
Martino, E.D. (2020). Fine-tuning Bank Governance and Resolution. The case for remunerating bankers through bail-inable debt ,31(5) European Business Law Review, 845-886.
ABSTRACT
Remuneration of bankers represents a highly contentious matter that has attracted the attention of academics and policy makers and the rage of the media and public in the aftermath of the financial crisis. This chapter proposes a radical change in the current remuneration practices, including bail-inable debt within the variable component of remuneration packages.
In fact, the current regulatory framework and resulting practices in the EU are to be considered heavily unsatisfactory since they decreased the link between pay and performance. Moreover, it does not consider the specificities of bank corporate governance; consequently, the negative externalities it generates are still not accounted for.
In supporting the, apparently naïve, claim of remunerating bankers through debt, the chapter set the economic rationale for remuneration, highlighting the special case of the banking industry and explaining why debt can be particularly useful in such framework. Against the theoretical framework resulting from such analysis, the incumbent EU regulation on the structure of remuneration packages is critically assessed. This highlights how the policy goal of optimising risk-taking incentives of bankers is far from being reached and, more importantly, that it cannot be reached without a radical change in the regulatory paradigm.
The chapter shows why such shift necessarily implies to include bail-inable debt in remuneration packages. The chapter shows how it would tighten the link between pay and performance, it would address the specificities of bank governance and, as an additional positive spillovers, it would enhance the resolvability of the institution. The second part of the research develop a detailed policy proposal that focuses both on the content of the regulation and on the possible implementation strategies.
Keywords: Remuneration, Capital Requirement Directive, Resolvability, Managerial Incentives; Material Risk-Takers.
Martino, E.D. (2019). Bail-inable securities and financial contracting: can contracts discipline bankers?. European Journal of Risk Regulation, 10(1), 164-179. doi:
ABSTRACT
The post-crisis stream of reforms, especially the new recovery and resolution framework, has been often welcomed for its aim to increase market discipline in the banking sector, allocating the losses to shareholders and creditors of failing banks and not anymore on the general public though state bail-out. Nonetheless, the concrete mechanisms according to which such turnaround shall happen and the corporate governance consequences of financial reforms have been severely understudied.
The paper tackles the trade-off between market discipline and financial stability in the post-crisis EU regulatory environment through the lenses of financial contracting. Building on the debt as a mechanism to contingently allocate control, the paper approaches the regulatory framework as a set of restrictions to contractual freedom, exploring the room for investors to discipline risk-taking of banks through specific contractual arrangements.
Traditional contractual devices are scrutinized against the qualitative requirements for regulatory capital and bail-inable securities and turned out to be largely unavailable because of regulatory constraints, so that the ability of investors to limit risk-taking appetite of managers is limited. Therefore, the attention moves to the peculiar case of contingent convertible instruments (Cocos), discussing some design features that might allow investors to successfully reduce risk-taking incentives both before and after the distress of the bank, enhancing market discipline after all.
Keywords: Incomplete contracts, Corporate governance, Banking regulation, Bail-in, Contingent convertible
JEL Classification: G21; G33; K29
Martino, E. D. (2018). Subordinated Debt Under Bail-in Threat. University of Bologna Law Review, 2(2), 252-299.
ABSTRACT
This paper aims to address the role of subordinated liabilities within the new resolution framework resulting from the post-crisis reforms.In particular, this study starts from the resolution intervention of four Italian banks in November 2015. The legal analysis of that resolution is complemented by an empirical analysis of the determinants of subordinated debt issuances for Italian banks.From this set of evidence is possible to infer the desirability of a well-functioning and dynamic market for subordinated debt. On the other hand, what clearly emerges is the incompatibility between such a market and the new regulatory framework as it is.Therefore, the paper, given the compelling arguments showing the inefficiency of a pure mandatory bail-in mechanism for subordinated debt, proposes to complement it with a contractual clause to bail-in subordinated creditors, tailored on coco bonds model, in order to enhance certainty amongst the contractual parties.
Keywords: Law and Economics, Law and Finance, European Banking Union, Resolution, Subordinated Bonds.; Decreto Salva Banche
JEL Classification: G21, G28, K22
Martino (2025) Cryptomercantilism vs. Monetary Sovereignty Dealing with the Challenges of US Stablecoins for the EU. Monetary Dialogue Papers, June 2025. [with J. van 't Klooster and E. Monnet]
ABSTRACT
The current US administration promotes dollar-backed stablecoins—privately issued and supported by US debt—to reinforce dollar dominance worldwide, a strategy we dub “cryptomercantilism.” This report studies the EU’s 2024 Markets in Crypto Assets Regulation (MiCAR) and its safeguards for the EU’s monetary sovereignty. It also compares MiCAR to the proposed GENIUS Act in the US. Under existing policies, USD stablecoins create severe risks for third countries, indirectly also affecting the EU. The EU should counter digital dollarisation by promoting the international role of the euro in a context of enhanced multilateral payment systems.
Press Coverage: Politico EU; Central Banking
Martino E.d. (2025) Licensing requirements for issuers of EMTs. Handbook on the Market in Crypto Assets Regulation, F. Annunziata and R. Lastra (eds), Oxford University Press [forthcoming]
ABSTRACT
This chapter analyses the regime applicable to stablecoins referencing one official currency– the e-money tokens–under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCAR). The analysis
highlights the dual nature of e-money tokens, which are characterised both as a type of cryptoassets and as electronic money. From this dual nature stems a complex interplay between
MiCAR’s bespoke provisions and the existing framework for electronic money and payment services. The chapter explores in detail the licensing requirements, substantive obligations, and
prudential safeguards applicable to issuers of e-money tokens, including the stricter regime for significant issuers. Finally, it addresses the challenges of extraterritoriality, and the mechanisms designed to preserve EU monetary sovereignty, particularly in relation to non-MiCAR compliant stablecoins and non-euro denominated e-money tokens. The analysis contributes to a broader understanding of how EU financial regulation adapts to the evolving landscape of digital private money.
Keywords: cryptocurrencies, e-money tokens, market in crypto-asset regulation
JEL Classification: G23; K22; K23
Martino E.D. (2025), Comparative Financial Regulation: An Analytical Framework. With A M Pacces and H Nabilou. Research Handbook in Comparative Financial Regulation, E. Martino, H. Nabilou, A.M. Pacces (eds)[forthcoming]
ABSTRACT
Financial markets play a significant role in channelling funds from surplus spending units (fund givers) to deficit spending units (fund takers). Whether financial intermediation is carried out by banks or capital markets, market failures are ubiquitous and call for financial regulation. This chapter studies how different jurisdictions cope with market failures in banking and capital markets with a focus on how such market failures are addressed in different jurisdictions. We identify significant divergences in financial regulation despite the similarity of market failures. The drivers of such divergences are the private law underpinnings of financial markets, diverging policy objectives and regulatory goals, and the varying structure of financial markets. However, in the past few decades, there has been significant harmonization and convergence of financial regulation at the global level. We identify two main drivers of convergence: convergence with the aim to reduce transaction costs for cross-border transactions, mainly driven by pressure from industry associations; and convergence in financial regulations to address risk spillovers and prevent potential race-to-the-bottom from regulatory arbitrage. Discussing the drivers of divergence and convergence in financial regulation, this chapter provides an analytical framework for the comparative analysis of financial regulation.
Keywords: Comparative Law & Economics, Financial Regulation, Banking, Capital Markets, Regulatory Convergence, Regulatory Competition
JEL Classification: G20; K22; P51
Martino E.D. (2025), Comparative Cryptocurrencies and Stablecoins Regulation: A Framework for a Functional Comparative Analysis. Research Handbook in Comparative Financial Regulation, E. Martino, H. Nabilou, A.M. Pacces (eds)[forthcoming]
ABSTRACT
The financial applications of the blockchain technology are gaining increasing attention in the regulatory sphere both for their growing relevance and for the several scandals and failures of the past months. The regulatory landscape is quickly and non-linearly evolving, resulting in the impossibility to capture a nitid snapshot of the international regulatory regime from a comparative perspective. Therefore, this chapter takes a functional approach, investigating the sources and dynamics of regulatory convergence and divergence in the area of cryptocurrencies and stablecoins. The chapter focuses mostly, but not exclusively, on the regulatory regime of the EU, UK and US. This chapter adds to the literature on the regulation of crypto finance as it provides a functional framework to approach an area whose regulation is quickly evolving. Moreover, it also adds to the comparative law literature, looking at the sources and dynamics of divergence in the regulation of innovative technologies.
Keywords: cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, comparative law, Market in Crypto Asset Regulation, Financial Services and Markets Bill
JEL Classification: G23, K22, K23
Martino E.D. (2021), FinTech and The Law & Economics of Disintermediation. The Routledge Handbook of Financial Technology and Law, Iris Chiu and Gudula Deipenbrock (eds), 78-95 [with F Kaja and A M Pacces]
ABSTRACT
As FinTech promises to increase competition for both banks and investment firms, we consider the market failures that emerge from its existence, particularly as they relate to issues of financial stability and investor protection. This chapter discusses the wave of technology-enabled disintermediation of financial services, asking how regulation should cope with the risks associated with disintermediating finance.
While regulation of financial intermediaries has been embraced because the industry is particularly prone to market failures, disintermediation has the potential to make current frameworks obsolete. The law & economics problem is twofold: 1) potential market failures, and 2) the issue of enforcement. This chapter discusses the foundations of financial intermediation and the traditional regulatory approaches to both banks and other providers of financial services. Our analysis establishes a distinction between FinTechs working outside and inside the blockchain. For the former, the crucial regulatory trade-off is between efficiency gains from innovation and regulatory arbitrage. For the latter, our analysis suggests that regulating the convertibility of cryptocurrencies into fiat money is a promising strategy not only to safeguard financial stability, but also to attract financial services to the regulatory perimeter, whenever it is efficient to do so.
Keywords: Law & economics, Disintermediation, Fintech, Financial Stability, Asymmetric Information.
JEL Classification: G21; G23; K22
Martino E.D. (2020). Supervisione bancaria e Covid-19 [Banking Supervision and Covid-19], in Sistema Produttivo E Sistema Finanziario Alla Sfida Del Covid, U. Malvagna e A. Sciarrone Alibrandi (eds), 165-190 [with Brozzetti A and Cecchinato E]
ABSTRACT
Sommario: 1. La risposta europea alla crisi pandemica: regole e supervisione alla prova dei fatti (inquadramento generale). – 2. Le misure di vigilanza adottate dalla BCE nel contesto della crisi da Covid-19. – 3. Il trattamento prudenziale delle esposizioni soggette a misure di moratoria, rifinanziamenti e garanzie pubbliche nella crisi da Covid-19. – 4. Prospettive per la supervisione e la risoluzione bancaria nel medio periodo: tra sostegno alla ripresa e rischio sistemico. – 5. Riflessioni conclusive.
Martino E.D. (2019), Free Trade Agreements have bitten off more than they can chew, in Upgrading Trade in Services in EU and International Economic Law (eds). [with Kejier T. and Quintavalla A.]
ABSTRACT
We analyse the tension surrounding the EU trade policy, with a particular focus on Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) that have recently gained considerable attention. The paper highlights different key trade policy objectives, including economic interests and moral values, and the expansive nature of the EU regarding the allocation of competences vis-à-vis Member States. Based on an a corporate versus FTA-law study regarding the right to establishment, our argument is that Member States may feel pressured by their competitors to change their national laws to implement the signed FTAs. This holds true, even if these changes are not strictly required according to the text of the FTA. The state of affairs can be explained through application of Hill’s capability-expectation gap theory. This framework suggests that the current limited EU competences can scarcely serve the EU’s international behaviour, thus causing a lack of coherence between the internal (protecting Member States’ interests) and external action (promoting trade). In this sense, FTAs have bitten off more than they can chew. Such a situation could negatively affect the EU’s reputation with Member States and citizens as well as its bargaining power with third countries. However, Hill’s framework also indicates how the capability-expectation gap could be reduced. In the short term, this requires a sincere dialogue with EU citizens, clearly signalling what the EU can, and what it cannot do. In the long term, European decision-makers ought to be particularly careful in drawing a clear line between the specific competences of the EU and those of the Member States. One viable option would be to grant the EU additional powers for concluding FTAs, as to prevent competition between Member States to arise.
Keywords: EU FTAs; M&A; corporate law; capability-expectation gap; multilevel governance
JEL Classification: F10; K29
Martino E.D. (2025) L’Europa alla prova delle stablecoin USA. Lavoce.info, posted on 07.07.2025.
Martino E.D. (2025) US dollar stablecoin mercantilism is an opportunity to promote payment multilateralism and the international role of the euro. VoxEU, posted on 03.07.2025. With J. v ‘t Klooster and E. Monnet
Martino E.D. (2025) The Hitchhiker's Guide to Comparative Financial Regulation. Elgar Blog, posted on 11.04.2025. With H. Nabilou and A. M. Pacces
Martino E.D. (2025) The Hitchhiker's Guide to Comparative Financial Regulation. Columbia Law School Blue Sky Blog, posted on 11.04.2025. With H. Nabilou and A. M. Pacces
Martino E.D. (2025) A Hitchhiker's Guide to Comparative Financial Regulation. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 17.03.2025. With H. Nabilou and A. M. Pacces
Martino E.D. (2024) The Social Cost of Blockchain. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 22.07.2024. With WG Ringe
Martino E.D. (2024) A Recovery Procedure for Undercapitalized Banks. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 02.05.2024. With E Perotti
Martino E.D. (2024) How a New Regulatory Framework Could Contain Bank Runs and Promote Recovery. Columbia Law School Blue Sky Blog, posted on 11.04.2024. With E Perotti
Martino E.D. (2024) Decentralised Autonomous Organizations: Targeting the Potential Beyond the Hype. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 18.03.2024. With O Borgogno
Martino E.D. (2024) Give recovery a chance. Containing runs in solvent banks. VoxEU Column, posted on 12.01.2024. With E Perotti
Martino E. D. (2024), The long-lasting legacy of banks’ bail-outs. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 04.01.2024. With A Perini
Martino E. D. (2023), Crypto Regulation from a Comparative Perspective: A Functional Framework for the Analysis. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 20.09.2023.
Martino E. D. (2023) The bail-in of Credit Suisse Cocos: why the Principal Write Down Made Sense. The CLS Blue Sky Blog, posted on 12.05.2023. With T Vos.
Martino E. D. (2023) Credit Suisse Cocos: why the Write Down Makes Sense. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 06.04.2023. With T Vos
Martino E. D. (2023) Su Credit Suisse le Autorità Svizzere Danno il Buon Esemptio (On Credit Suisse the Swiss Authorities Set a Good Example). LaVoce.info, posted on 06.04.2023
Martino E. D. (2022) What is Wrong with the EU Market in Crypto-Asset Regulation? Stablecoin between Innovation and Financial Stability. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 17.11.2022.
Martino E.D. (2021) How Decentralised are ‘Decentralised Autonomous Organisations’ (DAOs)? Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 05.11.2021. With S Spijkerman.
Martino E. D. (2021) Beyond loss-absorption in bank resolution: the essential role of the composition of bail-inable investors. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 11.05.2021.
Martino E. D. (2020) Disintermediating Finance: Fintech and its Limitations. The FinReg Blog at Duke Law School, posted on 08.01.2021. With F Kaja and A M Pacces
Martino E. D. (2020) Debunking Fintech Inside and Outside the Blockchain. The CLS Blue Sky Blog. Posted on 27.11.2020. With F Kaja and A M Pacce
Martino E. D. (2020) Bail-in beyond Unpredictability: Creditors’ Incentives and Market Discipline. Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 18.06.2020
Martino E. D. (2019) Free Trade Agreements: Corporate Law Powers of the EU and Member States, and a Way Forward (blog post). Oxford Business Law Blog, posted on 10 October 2019.
Martino E. D. (2019) Can Contracts Discipline Bankers? (blog post). Regulation-Y, posted on 14 July 2019.
Martino E. D. (2019) Corporate Governance and Stewardship (Conference Report). ECGI-ICGN Academic Day, Amsterdam, 11 Februray 2019. [with E. Ghibellini]
Martino E. D. (2018) Law & Economics of Banks Corporate Governance in the Bail-in Era. SSRN Link.
Martino E. D. (2015) Crisi del gruppo bancario e prospettive europee sul riconoscimento dell’interesse di gruppo (The Crisis of Banking Groups and the EU Perspectives on the Recognition of the 'Interest of the Group'). SSRN Link.
Martino E. D. (2022), Regulating Stablecoins as Private Money. A Critical Take on the EU Proposal between Liquidity and Safety. Amsterdam Center for Law & Economics Working Paper No. 2022-07
Martino E.D., Corporate Carbon Leakage Green Finance Arbitrage through the Corporate Status [with V Battocletti]
Martino E.D., A Market for Limes. The Information View on Bank Green Capital Requirements [with K Parchimowicz]
Martino E.D., Cryptomercantilism vs. Monetary Sovereignty How the stablecoin regulation shapes the battle for international monetary supremacy [with J. van't Klooster; E Monnet]
Martino E.D., Bank payout policy, low profitability and prudential regulation. [With R Oostdam and E Perotti]