03. Annex II Financial Capacity Form.docx
03. Annex II Financial Capacity Form
03. Annex II Financial Capacity Form
The European Banking Authority (EBA) released today its methodology and macroeconomic scenarios for the 2014 EU-wide stress test. While the extensive process of banks’ balance sheet repair is already underway, the test, designed to assess banks’ resilience to hypothetical external shocks, will identify remaining vulnerabilities in the EU banking sector and will provide a high level of transparency into EU banks’ exposures.
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published today the final templates for the 2014 EU-wide stress test. These are common templates for all EU banks and illustrate the type and the format of data that will be disclosed on a bank by bank basis. The EBA will act as the central data hub for all EU banks providing a comprehensive dataset in an editable and user-friendly format. By disclosing data in a consistent and comparable way across the Single Market, the EBA will bring greater transparency to EU banks, contributing to enhanced market discipline of the entire EU banking sector.
01. Lot 1 PQQ
03. Annex II Financial Capacity Form
04. Annex III List of Profiles
02. Annex I Declaration of Honour
05. Annex IV Contractor CVs
BSG response to Consultation Paper (EBA/CP/2014/07) -19 August 2014
EBA BSG 2014 62 Rev1 (Minutes BSG 26 June 2014)
XBRL Taxonomy and Supporting Documents.2.2
DPM Database 2.2
DPM Table Layout and Data Point Categorisation 2.2
DPM Dictionary 2.2
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published today a new XBRL taxonomy to be used by competent authorities for remittance of data under the EBA Implementing Technical Standards (ITS) on supervisory reporting. The new taxonomy will have as reference date 31 December 2014 onwards and will be used for the first reports on asset encumbrance and funding plans. The new taxonomy presents the data items, business concepts, relations, visualisations and validation rules described by the EBA Data Point Model (DPM) which are contained in the ITS on supervisory reporting and in the EBA Guidelines on definitions and templates on funding plans.
These Guidelines propose harmonised definitions and templates for funding plans of credit institutions, with the objective of ensuring consistency in the way the reporting of funding plans is conducted.
The European Commission published today its Report on the operation of the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) and the European System of Financial Supervision (ESFS). The report recognises the overall effectiveness and efficiency of the three European Supervisory Authorities in contributing to restoring confidence in the financial sector and promoting the Single Rulebook. It also identifies areas where adjustments might be needed in order to improve and strengthen the functioning of the current institutional set up, also in light of the establishment of the Banking Union.