The bank's income or losses will affect the budgetary balance, but the fact that we're allowing the bank to withhold its remittances will not.
For example, if the bank earns an extra $1 billion this year, it will be an extra $1 billion dollars in the budgetary balance. If it has losses of $1 billion a year, it will be $1 billion less. However, whether the bank gets to hold the remittances—for example, if it earns $1 billion and it gets to hold the remittances—does not impact the balance because that extra $1 billion is already booked in the fiscal framework. That means it already affects the budgetary balance regardless of whether the cash flows back to the government.