Is the convenience of digital deposits a ticking time bomb for smaller lenders? The Bank of Italy has stepped up its monitoring of “online deposit platforms” used by smaller Italian banks to raise capital abroad. Lessons from the 2023 Silicon Valley Bank collapse are fueling fears that what is easy to deposit is even easier to withdraw during a crisis.
💰 THE METRICS (The €11.5B Exposure):
- The Total: As of December 2025, 30 smaller Italian banks (Less Significant Institutions – LSIs) held €11.5 billion raised through online platforms.
- Funding Concentration: These deposits now represent 10% of their overall funding.
- The “Top 5” Risk: Just five banks account for 75% of the total sum, signaling a massive concentration risk.
- Volatility Factor: Unlike traditional banking, these deposits lack a long-term client relationship, making them highly sensitive to interest rate changes or market jitters.
⚠️ THE MACRO CATALYST (The Post-SVB Reality):
- The “Click” Danger: Regulators are concerned that digital-first deposits can accelerate bank runs. In times of stress, savers can pull their funds with a single click across borders, leaving smaller banks with narrow funding sources vulnerable to instant liquidity dry-ups.
- Compliance Concerns: Beyond liquidity, the Bank of Italy warned that cross-border digital platforms carry higher risks for money laundering and terrorism financing due to the lack of “face-to-face” verification.
- ECB vs. Local Oversight: While large banks are under direct ECB watch, these smaller LSIs are supervised by the Bank of Italy, which is now recalibrating how it measures liquidity risk in the digital age.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE: The era of “sticky” retail deposits is ending. Smaller banks are using these platforms to tap into the European retail market, but they are paying a price in stability. The Bank of Italy’s report is a warning shot: banks can no longer treat online deposits as stable capital. For investors and savers, the message is clear—digital convenience comes with a high “volatility premium,” and regulators are no longer willing to look the other way.
