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EBA Public Hearing - 2 July 2019 - Basel III Call for Advice.pdf
EBA public hearing on 2 July 2019 discussing key findings and policy recommendations for Basel III implementation in the EU, covering credit risk, operational risk, output floor, and market risk frameworks, with impact assessments and advice for the European Commission.
EBA Basel assessment sees impact driven by large banks
The European Banking Authority (EBA) presented today, during a public hearing, the results of its Basel III implementation assessment, which includes a quantitative impact study (QIS) based on data from 189 EU banks, and a comprehensive set of policy recommendations in the area of credit and operational risk, output floor and securities financing transactions. This work, which responds to a Commission’s call for advice, shows that the full implementation of Basel III in the EU, under the most conservative assumptions, increases the weighted average minimum capital requirement (MRC) by 24.4%, leading to an aggregate capital shortfall of EUR 135.1 bn. Importantly, the capital impact is almost entirely driven by large globally active banks. The impact on medium-sized banks is limited to 11.3% in terms of MRC, leading to a shortfall of EUR 0.9 bn, and on small banks to 5.5% MRC with a EUR 0.1 bn shortfall. The EBA will publish the full report by the end of July.
Annual list of specific contracts under framework contracts and legal services under 2018.pdf
Annual list of specific contracts under framework contracts and legal services under Article 134(1)(h)
Contracts with a value below the Directive thresholds awarded in 2018.pdf
Contracts with a value below the Directive thresholds awarded in 2018
CP on draft RTS on liquidity horizons for the IMA under CRR2.pdf
Consultation Paper on draft RTS on liquidity horizons for the IMA
CP on draft RTS on back-testing and PLA attribution requirements under CRR2.pdf
Consultation Paper on draft RTS on back-testing and PLA attribution requirements
NMRF data collection template.xlsx
NMRF data collection template (11 October 2019)
Consultation Paper on draft RTS on criteria for assessing risk factors modellability under the IMA.pdf
Consultation Paper on draft RTS on criteria for assessing risk factors modellability under the IMA
Instructions on NMRF data collection.pdf
Instructions on NMRF data collection
EBA roadmap for the new market and counterparty credit risk approaches.pdf
EBA roadmap for the new market and counterparty credit risk approaches
Technical Standards on the IMA under the FRTB
EBA issues 2020 EU-wide stress test methodology for discussion
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published today the 2020 EU-wide stress test draft methodology, templates and template guidance, which will be discussed with the industry. The 2020 exercise will assess EU banks' resilience to an adverse economic shock and inform the 2020 Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP). The methodology covers all risk areas and builds on the methodology prepared for the 2018 exercise, while improving some aspects based on the lessons learnt. The preliminary list of institutions participating in the exercise as well as the timeline are also released today.
2020 EU-wide stress test - Draft Templates.xlsx
2020 EU-wide stress test - Draft Templates
2020 EU-wide stress test - Draft Template Guidance.pdf
2020 EU-wide stress test - Draft Template Guidance
2020 EU-wide stress test - Draft Methodological Note.pdf
2020 EU-wide stress test - Draft Methodological Note
CEBS Guidelines on Liquidity Buffers
The Committee of European Banking Supervisors (CEBS) today publishes its guidelines on liquidity buffers following a four-month public consultation period and a public hearing. These guidelines, which build on CEBS's Recommendations on Liquidity Risk Management, elaborate upon the appropriate size and composition of liquidity buffers to enable banks to withstand a liquidity stress for a period of at least one month without changing their business models.
EBA Opinion on SCA elements under PSD2 .pdf
Opinion on the elements of strong customer authentication under PSD2
EBA publishes an Opinion on the elements of strong customer authentication under PSD2
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published today an Opinion on the elements of strong customer authentication (SCA) under the revised Payment Services Directive (PSD2). The Opinion is a response to continued queries from market actors as to which authentication approaches the EBA considers to be compliant with SCA. The Opinion also addresses concerns about the preparedness and compliance of some actors in the payments chain with the SCA requirements that apply as of 14 September 2019.