Barclays' exit tests the resilience of Euribor’s governance while the ongoing panel enlargement reinforces confidence in Europe’s key unsecured money‑market benchmark, affecting loan pricing and derivative contracts.
The Euribor benchmark underpins trillions of euros in loans, mortgages and derivatives across the Eurozone, making its governance a focal point for regulators and market participants. ESMA’s oversight of the European Money Market Institute ensures that the panel of contributing banks reflects the breadth of the unsecured money market, a requirement reinforced after past scandals involving benchmark manipulation. By confirming that Barclays’ departure will not erode representativeness, ESMA signals that the panel’s methodology and data‑collection processes remain robust, preserving market confidence.
Recent panel enlargement, which added three banks from Finland, Greece and Austria since 2022, illustrates a deliberate strategy to diversify input sources and mitigate concentration risk. This broader base enhances the statistical reliability of the rate and aligns with EU directives aimed at strengthening benchmark integrity. The forthcoming addition of another bank, hinted at by EMMI, further consolidates this diversification, ensuring that Euribor continues to mirror true market conditions despite individual member exits.
Looking ahead, ESMA’s call for more credit institutions to join the panel reflects a proactive stance toward future-proofing the benchmark against liquidity shocks and regulatory scrutiny. Increased participation can improve the depth of transaction data, reduce volatility, and support more accurate pricing for corporate borrowers and investors. For banks, joining the panel offers visibility and influence over a critical reference rate, while for borrowers, it translates into greater price stability and transparency in the Euro money market.
Upcoming changes to the Euribor Panel 18 February 2026
Benchmarks
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), the EU’s financial markets regulator and supervisor, is issuing a statement on the upcoming changes to the Euribor panel, in its capacity as supervisor of the European Money Market Institute (EMMI), administrator of Euribor.
This statement concerns the announcement by EMMI that Barclays Bank PLC (BBPLC), based in the United Kingdom, will withdraw from the Euribor panel. The withdrawal will take effect on 27 February 2026, which will be the bank’s final day contributing input data to the benchmark determination.
ESMA and National Competent Authorities within the Euribor College of Supervisors have assessed the impact of the departure of BBPLC on Euribor representativeness of the Euro unsecured money market. ESMA and the College concluded that BBPLC’s departure does not pose a risk to the representativeness of Euribor.
This departure follows a period of Euribor panel enlargement with the addition of three new panel banks since 2022 (More information: 1,2). ESMA views positively that EMMI's announcement also indicates that another bank will soon join the Euribor panel. ESMA continues to encourage credit institutions active in the Euro unsecured money market to consider joining the Euribor panel, actively supporting the robustness and representativeness of this critical benchmark within the EU financial system.
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Communications Officer
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