The SRM is to complement the work of the European Central Bank in the role of a single supervisor of all euro zone banks.
"The European Council... underlined the following points: a fully effective SSM (single supervisor) requires a Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM) for banks covered by the SSM, with strong resolution powers, allowing quick, effective and coherent decision-making at central level," the leaders said, using the careful legal language employed in summit declarations.
"The European Council looks forward to the Commission's proposal establishing an SRM with a view to reaching agreement in the Council by the end of the year so that it can be adopted before the end of the current parliamentary term," they said.
The European Parliament has its last plenary session in mid April 2014.
The SRM is to have access to funds that it may need to help finance the restructuring or closure of banks, if losses imposed on shareholders and bondholders or even large depositors are not enough to cover the needs.
The central fund is to be built from fees paid in annually by banks, just like the national resolution funds created under the intermediate law, but until enough money accrues over the next 10 years, it may need to resort to the euro zone bailout fund for help.
The leaders remained vague on how the fund would work.
"It should include appropriate funding arrangements, based on contributions by the financial sector itself, and an appropriate and effective backstop which should be fiscally neutral over the medium term," they said.
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