The ECB's review will be followed by a stress test that would simulate bank losses in a sudden economic downturn or financial crisis, conducted along with the European Banking Authority.
The question is whether that stress test will be more credible than the previous ones.
Thomas Huertas, a partner in a unit of Ernst & Young, said they probably would because the ECB will have already reviewed the banks' balance sheets before conducting the test something the EBA was not able to do before.
At the end, banks could be pushed to repair their finances by raising more capital or selling off risky holdings.
The issue is import for Europe's recovery because banks that are holding soured investments, such as bad loans, may be unable or unwilling to find cash to lend to businesses that need credit to expand their operations. They may also be asking for higher interest rates to lend, blunting the ECB's ability to stimulate the economy with lower borrowing costs.
The eurozone grew only 0.2 percent in the second quarter after contracting for six quarters and unemployment remains high at 12 percent.
The asset review and stress test need to be done before the ECB takes over as the European Union's banking supervisor next year. The single supervisor is part of a broader effort to strengthen the financial system and prevent a repeat of the debt problems afflicting countries such as Spain and Ireland, where bank bailouts hurt government finances.
Ignazio Angeloni, an ECB official, said the result would call for "repair where repair is necessary" and won't necessarily include a figure for raising new capital.
The ECB's job may be complicated by the fact that Europe does not yet have a single authority to restructure or shore up banks that review identifies as weak. European leaders are still debating how to set up such an authority. If banks cannot raise new capital from private investors, they could turn to their national authorities. Under some circumstances, the eurozone's bailout fund could be used, but the idea has faced stiff political resistance from governments.