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Consultation paper on draft Joint ESMA and EBA Guidelines on the assessment of the suitability of members of the management body and key function holders
EBA and ESMA consult on joint guidelines for assessing suitability of management body members and key function holders under CRD IV and MiFID II, covering proportionality, diversity, reputation, skills, training, and ongoing monitoring requirements.
Consultation Paper on RTS to specify the minimum content of the suitability questionnaire
EBA consults on draft Regulatory Technical Standards outlining minimum requirements for suitability questionnaires, CVs, and internal assessments under Directive 2013/36/EU for bank management evaluations, with feedback due by May 2026.
EBA DC 2021373 Basel consolidated version (17 02 2026)
EBA decision establishing mandatory annual data collection from EU credit institutions to monitor Basel III standards, assess regulatory mandates, and support impact analysis—covering capital, liquidity, leverage, and funding ratios for systemic and large banks.
Follow up Peer Review Report on ICT Risk Assessment under SREP
European Banking Authority follow-up report assessing progress on ICT risk evaluation under the Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP), including recommendations for competent authorities, benchmarking, and alignment with DORA and CRD/CRR frameworks.
The EBA publishes follow-up Report on ICT risk assessment under the Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process
The European Banking Authority (EBA) today published the follow-up to its 2022 peer review report on ICT risk assessment under the supervisory review and evaluation process (SREP). The follow-up Report shows that competent authorities have made notable progress in strengthening ICT risk assessment, driven largely by the implementation of the Digital Operational Resilience Act. At the same time, further work and continued investment remain necessary to ensure consistent and effective ICT risk supervision across the European Union (EU).
MICA053 - Overlap between offers of crypto-assets and placing
Can persons who are authorized in writing by the issuer to offer crypto-assets to the public conduct this activity on a commercial basis, continuously, repeatedly, and possibly for different issuers (whether concurrently or consecutively) without having a MiCA CASP license for the crypto-asset service 'placing of crypto-assets'?
MiCA045 - Calculation of fixed overheads
In Article 67, Paragraph 1, crypto asset providers shall at all time have prudential safeguards as the highest of the following;
- the amount of permanent minimum capital requirements indicated in Annex IV
- one quarter of the fixed overheads of the preceding year, reviewed annually
In Paragraph 3, the method to calculate the prudential requirement of one quarter of the fixed overheads of the preceding year, reviewed annually is stated as;
"Crypto-asset service providers shall calculate their fixed overheads for the preceding year, using figures resulting from the applicable accounting framework, by subtracting the following items from the total expenses after distribution of profits to shareholders or members."
When defining "total expenses" in the quoted sentence from Paragraph 3, does it in fact mean the total costs (fixed and variable overheads) after distribution of profits in the income statement for the preceding year, or is it meant to be the total fixed overheads after distribution of profits?
MICA052 - Application of Title II requirements to CASPs operating a trading platform for crypto-assets
Article 5(2) of MiCA states that “when a crypto-asset is admitted to trading on the initiative of a trading platform and a crypto-asset white paper has not been published in accordance with Article 9 in the cases required by this Regulation [emphasis added], the operator of that trading platform for crypto-assets shall comply with the requirements set out in paragraph 1 of this Article”.
In turn, Article 9 requires offerors and persons seeking admission to trading of crypto-assets other than ARTs or EMTs to publish their crypto-asset white papers and any marketing materials.
However, recital 22 of MiCA states that “Where crypto-assets have no identifiable issuer, they should not fall within the scope of Title II, III or IV of this Regulation”.
Does the expression “in the cases required by this Regulation” mean that Article 5(2) exempts operators of trading platforms from the requirements of Article 5 for crypto-assets without an identifiable issuer?
MiCA040 - Payouts in fiat currency by CASPs in the context of exchange services
Should the business model whereby a crypto-asset service provider (CASP) provides exchange services but only ever allows clients to collect their balance in fiat currency be allowed?
MICA051 - Withdrawal of crypto-assets
I seek clarification regarding the obligations of Crypto-Asset Service Providers (CASPs) under Article 75 of the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) concerning the ability for customers to withdraw specific crypto assets. Specifically, does Article 75 require CASPs to enable customers to withdraw every cryptocurrency offered for trading on the platform? For example, if a cryptocurrency exchange allows customers to trade Dogecoin but faces technical limitations in facilitating direct Dogecoin withdrawals, would it suffice to offer a conversion option, allowing customers to exchange Dogecoin for Bitcoin, Ethereum, or fiat currency, which they can then withdraw?
MICA039 - Interest earned from client funds deposited at credit institutions
Does MiCA permit crypto-asset service providers (CASPs) to earn interest on client funds deposited in a savings account at a credit institution?
Decision amending EBA DC 2021 373 on information required for the monitoring of Basel supervisory standards
EBA decision amending data collection requirements for monitoring Basel III supervisory standards, including additional data on CRR3 implementation, Loss Given Default floors, leasing exposures, and Securities Financing Transactions to assess EU banking sector competitiveness and regulatory impacts.
2026 02 15 PMR Helmut Ettl
European Banking Authority (EBA) public meeting register for February 1–15, 2026, listing Vice-Chairperson Helmut Ettl’s disclosed engagements – confirms no meetings or hospitality were reported during this period.
ROPAp - Pillar 3 Datahub
European Banking Authority (EBA) record of processing activity for the Pillar 3 Datahub under EUDPR, detailing personal data handling for contact persons submitting prudential disclosures under CRR, including data categories, retention, and security measures.
ROPAp - ERMS
European Banking Authority (EBA) record of processing activities under EUDPR Article 31, detailing its Electronic Document and Records Management System (ERMS) – covering data processing purposes, categories of personal data, retention periods, and access controls for EBA staff and external participants.
Final Minutes of BSG conference call on 11 December 2025
Summary of the EBA Banking Stakeholder Group (BSG) conference call on 11 December 2025 – covering updates on working group activities, responses to SREP and AML/CFT consultations, progress on sustainable finance, payments regulation (PSD3/PSR), and EBA’s risk assessments and publications for 2025-2026.
Management Board meeting
The EBA ESG Dashboard update shows stable climate risk indicators
The European Banking Authority (EBA) today published the latest edition of its ESG risk dashboard, integrating data up to the second quarter of 2025. The dashboard reflects the latest changes in banks 'exposures to climate risks and aims to provide background information to support institutions and authorities in managing these risks. The new release confirms continued stability across major climate related risk indicators, broadly in line with the patterns observed in previous updates.
Opinion on the draft simplified European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS)
EBA opinion on the European Commission’s draft simplified European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), assessing alignment with risk management needs, interoperability with global standards (ISSB), and proportionality of reporting reliefs under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD).