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COUNCIL REGULATION
(EC) No 1103/97
of 17 June
1997
on certain
provisions relating to the introduction of the euro
THE COUNCIL
OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,
Having regard to
the Treaty establishing the European Community, and in particular Article
235 thereof,
Having regard to
the proposal of the Commission(¹),
Having regard to
the opinion of the European Parliament(²),
Having regard to
the opinion of the European Monetary Institute(³),
| (1) |
Whereas, at its meeting
held in Madrid on 15 and 16 December 1995, the European Council confirmed
that the third stage of Economic and Monetary Union will start on 1 January
1999 as laid down in Article 109j (4) of the Treaty; whereas the Member
States which will adopt the euro as the single currency in accordance with
the Treaty will be defined for the purposes of this Regulation as the 'participating
Member States'; |
| (2) |
Whereas, at the meeting
of the European Council in Madrid, the decision was taken that the term
'ECU' used by the Treaty to refer to the European currency unit is a generic
term; whereas the Governments of the fifteen Member States have achieved
the common agreement that this decision is the agreed and definitive interpretation
of the relevant Treaty provisions; whereas the name given to the European
currency shall be the 'euro'; whereas the euro as the currency of the participating
Member States will be divided into one hundred sub-units with the name
'cent'; whereas the European Council furthermore considered that the name
of the single currency must be the same in all the official languages of
the European Union, taking into account the existence of different alphabets; |
| (3) |
Whereas a Regulation on the introduction of the euro will be adopted by the Council on the basis of the third sentence of Article 109l (4) of the Treaty as soon as the participating Member States are known in order to define the legal framework of the euro; whereas the Council, when acting at the starting date of the third stage in accordance with the first sentence of Article 109l (4) of the Treaty, shall adopt the irrevocably fixed conversion rates; |
| (4) |
Whereas it is necessary,
in the course of the operation of the common market and for the changeover
to the single currency, to provide legal certainty for citizens and firms
in all Member States on certain provisions relating to the introduction
of the euro well before the entry into the third stage; whereas this legal
certainty at an early stage will allow preparations by citizens and firms
to proceed under good conditions; |
| (5) |
Whereas the third sentence
of Article 109l (4) of the Treaty, which allows the Council, acting with
the unanimity of participating Member States, to take other measures necessary
for the rapid introduction of the single currency is available as a legal
basis only when it has been confirmed, in accordance with Article 109j
(4) of the Treaty, which Member States fulfil the necessary conditions
for the adoption of a single currency; whereas it is therefore necessary
to have recourse to Article 235 of the Treaty as a legal basis for those
provisions where there is an urgent need for legal certainty; whereas therefore
this Regulation and the aforesaid Regulation on the introduction of the
euro will together provide the legal framework for the euro, the principles
of which legal framework were agreed by the European Council in Madrid;
whereas the introduction of the euro concerns day-to-day operations of
the whole population in participating Member States; whereas measures other
than those in this Regulation and in the Regulation which will be adopted
under the third sentence of Article 109l (4) of the Treaty should be examined
to ensure a balanced changeover, in particular for consumers; |
| (6) |
Whereas the ECU as referred
to in Article 109g of the Treaty and as defined in Council Regulation (EC)
No 3320/94 of 22 December 1994 on the consolidation of the existing Community
legislation on the definition of the ECU following the entry into force
of the Treaty on European Union (4) will cease to be defined as a basket
of component currencies on 1 January 1999 and the euro will become a currency
in its own right; whereas the decision of the Council regarding the adoption
of the conversion rates shall not in itself modify the external value of
the ECU; whereas this means that one ECU in its composition as a basket
of component currencies will become one euro; whereas Regulation (EC) No
3320/94 therefore becomes obsolete and should be repealed; whereas for
references in legal instruments to the ECU, parties shall be presumed to
have agreed to refer to the ECU as referred to in Article 109g of the Treaty
and as defined in the aforesaid Regulation; whereas such presumption should
be rebuttable taking into account the intentions of the parties; |
| (7) |
Whereas it is a generally
accepted principle of law that the continuity of contracts and other legal
instruments is not affected by the introduction of a new currency; whereas
the principle of freedom of contract has to be respected; whereas the principle
of continuity should be compatible with anything which parties might have
agreed with reference to the introduction of the euro; whereas, in order
to reinforce legal certainty and clarity, it is appropriate explicitly
to confirm that the principle of continuity of contracts and other legal
instruments shall apply between the former national currencies and the
euro and between the ECU as referred to in Article 109g of the Treaty and
as defined in Regulation (EC) No 3320/94 and the euro; whereas this implies,
in particular, that in the case of fixed interest rate instruments the
introduction of the euro does not alter the nominal interest rate payable
by the debtor; whereas the provisions on continuity can fulfil their objective
to provide legal certainty and transparency to economic agents, in particular
for consumers, only if they enter into force as soon as possible; |
| (8) |
Whereas the introduction
of the euro constitutes a change in the monetary law of each participating
Member State; whereas the recognition of the monetary law of a State is
a universally accepted principle; whereas the explicit confirmation of
the principle of continuity should lead to the recognition of continuity
of contracts and other legal instruments in the jurisdictions of third
countries; |
| (9) |
Whereas the term 'contract'
used for the definition of legal instruments is meant to include all types
of contracts, irrespective of the way in which they are concluded; |
| (10) |
Whereas the Council,
when acting in accordance with the first sentence of Article 109l (4) of
the Treaty, shall define the conversion rates of the euro in terms of each
of the national currencies of the participating Member States; whereas
these conversion rates should be used for any conversion between the euro
and the national currency units or between the national currency units;
whereas for any conversion between national currency units, a fixed algorithm
should define the result; whereas the use of inverse rates for conversion
would imply rounding of rates and could result in significant inaccuracies,
notably if large amounts are involved; |
| (11) |
Whereas the introduction
of the euro requires the rounding of monetary amounts; whereas an early
indication of rules for rounding is necessary in the course of the operation
of the common market and to allow a timely preparation and a smooth transition
to Economic and Monetary Union; whereas these rules do not affect any rounding
practice, convention or national provisions providing a higher degree of
accuracy for intermediate computations; |
| (12) |
Whereas, in order to
achieve a high degree of accuracy in conversion operations, the conversion
rates should be defined with six significant figures; whereas a rate with
six significant figures means a rate which, counted from the left and starting
by the first non-zero figure, has six figures, |
HAS ADOPTED
THIS REGULATION:
Article 1
| For the purpose of
this Regulation: |
| - |
'legal instruments'
shall mean legislative and statutory provisions, acts of administration,
judicial decisions, contracts, unilateral legal acts, payment instruments
other than banknotes and coins, and other instruments with legal effect, |
| - |
'participating Member
States' shall mean those Member States which adopt the single currency
in accordance with the Treaty, |
| - |
'conversion rates' shall
mean the irrevocably fixed conversion rates which the Council adopts in
accordance with the first sentence of Article 109l (4) of the Treaty, |
| - |
'national currency units'
shall mean the units of the currencies of participating Member States,
as those units are defined on the day before the start of the third stage
of Economic and Monetary Union, |
| - |
'euro unit' shall mean
the unit of the single currency as defined in the Regulation on the introduction
of the euro which will enter into force at the starting date of the third
stage of Economic and Monetary Union. |
| Article 2 |
| 1. |
Every reference in a
legal instrument to the ECU, as referred to in Article 109g of the Treaty
and as defined in Regulation (EC) No 3320/94, shall be replaced by a reference
to the euro at a rate of one euro to one ECU. References in a legal instrument
to the ECU without such a definition shall be presumed, such presumption
being rebuttable taking into account the intentions of the parties, to
be references to the ECU as referred to in Article 109g of the Treaty and
as defined in Regulation (EC) No 3320/94. |
| 2. |
Regulation (EC) No 3320/94
is hereby repealed. |
| 3. |
This Article shall apply
as from 1 January 1999 in accordance with the decision pursuant to Article
109j (4) of the Treaty. |
| Article 3 |
| |
The introduction
of the euro shall not have the effect of altering any term of a legal instrument
or of discharging or excusing performance under any legal instrument, nor
give a party the right unilaterally to alter or terminate such an instrument.
This provision is subject to anything which parties may have agreed.
|
| Article 4 |
| 1. |
The conversion rates
shall be adopted as one euro expressed in terms of each of the national
currencies of the participating Member States. They shall be adopted with
six significant figures. |
| 2. |
The conversion rates
shall not be rounded or truncated when making conversions. |
| 3. |
The conversion rates
shall be used for conversions either way between the euro unit and the
national currency units. Inverse rates derived from the conversion rates
shall not be used. |
| 4. |
Monetary amounts to
be converted from one national currency unit into another shall first be
converted into a monetary amount expressed in the euro unit, which amount
may be rounded to not less than three decimals and shall then be converted
into the other national currency unit. No alternative method of calculation
may be used unless it produces the same results. |
| Article 5 |
| Monetary amounts
to be paid or accounted for when a rounding takes place after a conversion
into the euro unit pursuant to Article 4 shall be rounded up or down to
the nearest cent. Monetary amounts to be paid or accounted for which are
converted into a national currency unit shall be rounded up or down to
the nearest sub-unit or in the absence of a sub-unit to the nearest unit,
or according to national law or practice to a multiple or fraction of the
sub-unit or unit of the national currency unit. If the application of the
conversion rate gives a result which is exactly half-way, the sum shall
be rounded up. |
| Article 6 |
| This Regulation shall
enter into force on the day following that of its publication in the Official
Journal of the European Communities. |
This Regulation shall
be binding in its entirety and directly applicable in all Member States.
| Done at Luxembourg, 17 June 1997 |
For the Council
The President
A. Jorritsma-Lebbink
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(1) OJ No C 369, 7.12.1996, P. 8
(2) OJ No C 380, 16.12.1996, P. 49
(3) Opinion delivered on 29 November 1996
(4) OJ No L 350, 31.12.1994, P.27
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