Search
EBA informs customers of UK financial institutions about the end of the Brexit transition period
The United Kingdom (UK) left the European Union (EU) on 31 January 2020. Under the Withdrawal Agreement reached between the EU and UK, EU law applies in the UK during a transition period until 31 December 2020. This means that EU law will stop to apply in the UK as of 1 January 2021, and from that date onwards, UK financial institutions not holding a valid authorisation from the supervisory authorities in the EU will lose the right to provide financial services in the EU.
ESAs highlight the change in the status of Simple, Transparent and Standardised (STS) securitisation transactions at the end of the UK transition period
The Joint Committee of the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) – ESMA, EBA and EIOPA – wish to highlight the impact in the change of status of ‘Simple, Transparent and Standardised’ (STS) securitisation transactions after the end of the Transition Period on 31 December 2020.
Brexit statement for consumers.pdf
Brexit statement for consumers
Impact of Brexit on consumers
Consolidated EBA GL on fraud reporting_EN version.pdf
Final draft RTS on FX and COM risk in the BB.pdf
RTS on the treatment of non-trading book positions subject to foreign exchange risk or commodity risk
Final Report on EBA GL on fraud reporting - Consolidated version.pdf
2020 11 30 PMR -2020 Jose Manuel Campa.pdf
EBA-GL-2020-15 Amending Guidelines EBA GL 2020 02 on payment moratoria.pdf
Guidelines amending Guidelines EBA GL 2020 02 on payment moratoria
Final report on EBA-GL-2020-02 Guidelines on payment moratoria - consolidated version.pdf
Guidelines on legislative and non-legislative moratoria on loan repayments applied in the light of the COVID-19 crisis – Consolidated version updated on 2 December 2020
EBA publishes final draft technical standards on the treatment of non-trading book positions subject to foreign-exchange risk or commodity risk under the FRTB framework
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published today final draft Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS) on how institutions are to calculate the own funds requirements for foreign-exchange and commodity risk stemming from banking book positions under the FRTB standardised and internal model approaches.
The EBA reactivates its Guidelines on legislative and non-legislative moratoria
After closely monitoring the developments of the COVID-19 pandemic and, in particular, the impact of the second COVID-19 wave and the related government restrictions taken in many EU countries, the European Banking Authority (EBA) has decided to reactivate its Guidelines on legislative and non-legislative moratoria. This reactivation will ensure that loans, which had previously not benefitted from payment moratoria, can now also benefit from them. The role of banks to ensure the continued flow of lending to clients remains of utmost importance and with the reactivation of these Guidelines, the EBA recognises the exceptional circumstances of the second COVID-19 wave. The EBA revised Guidelines, which will apply until 31 March 2021, include additional safeguards against the risk of an undue increase in unrecognised losses on banks’ balance sheet.