Finance

Proposed defence bank head refuses to be drawn on NATO members' support

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on February 25, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 2, 2026

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By Marc Jones LONDON, Feb 25 (Reuters) - The head of a group planning a new multilateral defence bank has refused to be drawn on which countries will support the project, following a public bid by

Proposed Defence Bank Chief Mum on Which NATO Nations Back Plan

By Marc Jones

LONDON, Feb 25 (Reuters) - The head of a group planning a new multilateral defence bank has refused to be drawn on which countries will support the project, following a public bid by Canada to host the bank but signs that Britain and Germany were resistant to the plan.

Financing Plan and Stakeholder Positions

The bank is being proposed by the Defence, Security and Resilience Bank Development Group, with the aim of providing financing for defence, security, and infrastructure projects for NATO members and allied nations.

Project Backers and Partner Banks

No government has formally put money into the project yet, but a number of commercial banks including Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan and Canadian banks Royal Bank of Canada, BMO and TD Bank have signed up as partner banks.

The group's CEO Rob Murray told a Chatham House event that a multilateral lender was needed for NATO countries' rearmament efforts, but steered clear of saying how much support it currently had.

CEO Avoids Naming National Supporters

"I can't really comment on where nations are on this particular project," Murray said when asked if the DSRB could be located in Toronto and if Britain's Treasury had shown any sign of dropping its resistance to the bank.

Funding Target and Credit Rating Goal

The DSRB's aim is to become a global state-backed bank with a triple-A credit rating capable of raising 100 billion pounds ($135 billion) to fund defence projects.

Government Reservations in the UK and Germany

British government officials though are concerned the proposal would not increase value from defence spending, while Germany wants to focus on the European Union's recently created Security Action for Europe (SAFE) joint procurement scheme.

Rationale for a Dedicated Multilateral Lender

Murray stressed the need for a broader multilateral effort. He cited an estimate that rules governing how much capital banks need to hold when they lend to arms manufacturers mean that even if all European banks were involved, only half the region's defence spending plans would be funded.

"You have to have a multilateral bank geared exclusively for defence that can provide that balance sheet power," Murray said.

UK Minister Flags Rising Security Threats

Speaking earlier at the event, Britain's armed forces minister Alistair Carns said the rising threats from the likes of Russia meant the UK military only had a short time to get itself "war fighting ready".

Crisis Readiness Timeline for Europe

"My view would be 3-5 years (for a) geographically contained crisis," Carns said. "If you look across Europe, the planning time is 2029-2030. People want to be ready".

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($1 = 0.7395 pounds)

(Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Jan Harvey)

Key Takeaways

  • The DSRB proposes a multilateral, state-backed lender to finance defence, security and infrastructure for NATO members and allies.
  • CEO Rob Murray declined to name supporting nations; Canada has bid to host while the UK and Germany show resistance, favoring other mechanisms like the EU’s SAFE.
  • No governments have committed capital yet, but partner banks include JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank and Canadian lenders such as RBC, BMO and TD.
  • Murray argues a dedicated multilateral bank is needed to overcome capital rules that limit commercial banks’ ability to fund defence plans.
  • UK Armed Forces Minister Alistair Carns warned the military must be “war fighting ready” within 3–5 years, with European planning focused on 2029–2030.

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main topic?
The article covers plans for a multilateral NATO defence bank led by the DSRB. Its CEO declined to name which nations support it as Canada bids to host and the UK and Germany express resistance.
Which banks are involved so far?
Commercial partners include JPMorgan and Deutsche Bank, plus Canadian banks such as RBC, BMO and TD. No governments have formally committed capital yet.
How large would the bank be and what is its goal?
The DSRB aims for a AAA-rated, state-backed lender capable of raising about £100 billion to finance defence and resilience projects for NATO members and allies.

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