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ECB Weighs Doubling Bank Reserve Requirements To Reduce Interest Costs

The European Central Bank is weighing a significant change to the way it manages liquidity across the euro area, with policymakers discussing a proposal to double the minimum reserves banks must hold from 1% to 2%, according to six sources cited by Reuters. If adopted, the move would reduce the ECB’s interest costs, absorb excess liquidity from the financial system and mark another step in the gradual unwinding of the extraordinary stimulus introduced over the past decade.

A Shift In The ECB’s Liquidity Strategy

Discussions are taking place as part of a broader review of the ECB’s operating framework, although the proposal has not yet been formally presented to the Governing Council. According to Reuters’ sources, deliberations remain at an early stage and a decision is unlikely before the autumn.

For the ECB and the euro area’s national central banks, raising the reserve requirement would serve two objectives. Increasing the amount of deposits banks must hold without earning interest would reduce the Eurosystem’s interest expenses while absorbing part of the excess liquidity created through years of large-scale bond purchases. Much of that surplus liquidity remains concentrated in countries such as Germany, where central banks have incurred sizeable losses from paying interest on deposits held above the required reserve level.

Billions In Potential Savings

At the current deposit rate of 2.25%, the ECB and the euro area’s 21 national central banks are paying interest on roughly €2.16 trillion of excess liquidity, equivalent to around €48.7 billion a year, according to Reuters calculations.

Doubling mandatory reserves from their current level of €173.56 billion would reduce that annual interest bill by almost €4 billion. Pressure on central bank finances has intensified since this month’s increase in the ECB’s deposit rate from 2% to 2.25%, a move intended to contain inflationary pressures linked to the war in the Middle East that also lifted the annual cost of excess liquidity by an estimated €5.4 billion.

Why Reserve Requirements Matter Again

Minimum reserve requirements were last reduced in 2012, when the ECB cut them from 2% to 1% at the height of the eurozone sovereign debt crisis to support lending and stabilise the banking system.

More than a decade later, policymakers face a very different environment. Banks have reported record profits, liquidity remains abundant, and the financial system no longer depends on the same level of extraordinary central bank support. Against that backdrop, increasing reserve requirements has become part of a broader discussion about how quickly the ECB should normalise its balance sheet.

Implications extend well beyond the central bank itself. Persistent losses reduce the profits national central banks can distribute to governments and, in more extreme cases, may require additional public capital. Institutions such as Germany’s Bundesbank have already spread those losses over several years after the ECB’s deposit rate reached as high as 4% in 2023 while excess liquidity remained at historically elevated levels.

Part Of A Broader Normalisation Process

Beyond the immediate savings, the discussion reflects a wider reassessment of the ECB’s monetary policy framework as crisis-era support measures continue to be unwound.

An increase in reserve requirements would signal that policymakers are looking beyond inflation alone and placing greater emphasis on the long-term costs of maintaining large volumes of idle liquidity in the financial system. It would also shift a greater share of that burden back to commercial banks while giving the ECB more control over the size and cost of its balance sheet.

Cloudflare Sets New Default To Separate Search Crawlers From AI Bots

Cloudflare has drawn a sharper line between traditional search and artificial intelligence.

Beginning September 15, 2026, the company will change its default settings to block so-called mixed-use crawlers from pages that run ads, unless a site owner chooses otherwise. The policy applies to new Cloudflare customers, new sites created by existing customers, and all current free customers.

A Clearer Divide In Web Access

The shift could materially reshape how AI companies collect web data for model training and agentic products. Cloudflare’s central argument is straightforward: most publishers want their content to remain visible in search and accessible through certain AI services, but they do not want that same material repurposed without compensation.

In Cloudflare’s view, the problem is not crawling itself. It is the blending of three different functions: search, agentic use, and training into a single bot that makes it difficult for website owners to set meaningful boundaries.

The Google Question

Cloudflare pointedly referenced the “world’s largest search engine,” an unmistakable nod to Google, arguing that it has access to roughly twice as much information as rival AI companies because it makes it harder for customers to stay discoverable without also being used for AI.

Google has disputed that framing. The company offers Google Extended, a crawler setting that lets publishers opt out of having content used for training and AI products such as Gemini apps and Vertex AI, without affecting visibility in Google Search. At the same time, Googlebot still crawls for Search and for AI-powered features such as AI Overviews and AI Mode.

Publishers Want Reach, Not Exploitation

Matthew Prince, Cloudflare’s co-founder and chief executive, said the company is moving quickly because the internet is now dominated by machine traffic.

“Now that the majority of traffic on the Internet is non-human, we must go further and act faster so that a sustainable ecosystem can emerge,” Prince said, referring to the recent milestone in which bots surpassed human traffic online sooner than expected.

Prince added that Cloudflare’s tools and partnerships are designed to give publishers more visibility and commercial leverage, while also rewarding AI companies that are transparent about how they use content.

From Pay Per Crawl To Pay Per Use

Cloudflare has increasingly positioned itself as a gatekeeper for publishers looking to assert control in the AI era. The company already offers tools to block AI bots, along with a marketplace called Pay Per Crawl, which lets websites charge AI systems for scraping.

That framework is now expanding into Pay Per Use, which Cloudflare says will allow publishers to charge AI companies when content creates value, not merely when it is fetched. In practical terms, that shifts the economics from extraction to monetization.

Cloudflare says the move may also reduce waste. Its data suggests more than half of crawl traffic from AI bots is spent revisiting pages that have not changed, consuming bandwidth and compute without adding fresh value for either side.

Early Partners Signal The Commercial Model

To launch the new system, Cloudflare is working with Ceramic.ai and You.com. Under the opt-in model, publishers can be paid when their content appears in Ceramic’s AI search results or when You.com accesses premium material.

Cloudflare says other AI companies can adapt the model to fit their own products. The broader message is clear: the era of unrestricted crawling is giving way to one in which access, attribution, and compensation are increasingly negotiated rather than assumed.

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