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Recommendation amending EBA/Rec/2015/02 on the equivalence of confidentiality regimes
With this Recommendation, several additional non-EU supervisory authorities were added to the list of non-EU or third country supervisory authorities whose confidentiality regimes can be regarded as equivalent. The EBA Recommendation is designed as a guide for EU authorities in their assessment of the equivalence of confidentiality regimes of third country supervisory authorities to facilitate their participation in supervisory colleges overseeing international banks.
Paper - Session 5.Thomas Kick.pdf
Paper - Session 5.Thomas Kick
Paper - Session 2. Lea Zicchino Emanuele De Meo Annalisa De Nicola.pdf
Paper - Session 2. Lea Zicchino Emanuele De Meo Annalisa De Nicola
Slides - Session 4. Ingrid Stein (Deutsche Bundesbank).pdf
Slides - Session 4. Ingrid Stein (Deutsche Bundesbank)
Slides - Discussant - Michiel Van Leuvensteijn.ppt
Slides - Discussant - Michiel Van Leuvensteijn
Paper - Session 4. Ingrid Stein (Deutsche Bundesbank).pdf
Paper - Session 4. Ingrid Stein (Deutsche Bundesbank)
Consultation on ITS amending Implementing Regulation (EU) No 680/2014 with regard to operational risk and sovereign exposures
Regulatory Technical Standards on risk mitigation techniques for OTC derivatives not cleared by a central counterparty (CCP)
Slides - Discussant - Valerie De Bruyckere EBA.pdf
Slides - Discussant - Valerie De Bruyckere EBA
Paper - Session 1 Akos Aczel (Central Bank of Hungary).pdf
Central Bank of Hungary research paper estimating demand in the Hungarian mortgage loan market using a conditional logit model on credit registry data, analyzing consumer choices, interest rate sensitivity, and constraints shaping borrowing decisions.
Slides - Session 1 Akos Aczel (Central Bank of Hungary).pdf
EBA Policy Research Workshop presentation by the National Bank of Hungary analysing Hungarian mortgage loan demand using a discrete choice framework, covering methodology, results, and policy implications.
Slides - Discussant - Oivind A. Nilsen (Norwegian School of Economics).pdf
EBA workshop presentation analysing the impact of the Federal Reserve's 2015 interest rate hike on consumer credit markets and online lending, using high-frequency data to assess macroeconomic shock effects.
Paper - Session 2- Oivind A. Nilsen (Norwegian School of Economics).pdf
Study by Norwegian School of Economics analysing the U-shaped relationship between banking competition and risk, using Norwegian bank data to show how concentration and interest margins influence non-performing loan rates and financial stability.
Slides - Session 2 - Nicola Gabarino.pdf
EBA Research Workshop presentation analysing mortgage risk specialisation under Basel II, focusing on residential mortgage market risks, capital requirement heterogeneity, and post-crisis regulatory impacts.
Slides - Session 3 - Discussant - Nicola Gabarino.pdf
EBA Research Workshop presentation by Bank of England’s Nicola Garbarino analysing EU banks’ interconnectedness with shadow banking entities using new EU-wide exposure data to assess systemic risks.
Slides - Session 2 - Lea Zicchino (Prometeia).pdf
EBA workshop presentation by Prometeia analysing the sustainability of European banks' business models, covering regulatory frameworks, data methodology, performance analysis, and peer group identification under 21st-century challenges.
Slides - Discussant - Klaus Duellmann, ECB.pdf
ECB discussant Klaus Düllmann presents findings on mortgage risk specialization under Basel II, analyzing how IRB models influence bank pricing, loan portfolio shifts, and regulatory cost pass-through at the 2016 EBA Policy Research Workshop.
Slides - Session 3 - Discussant - Massimiliano Rimarchi EBA.pdf
EBA Research Workshop 2016 presentation by Massimiliano Rimarchi analysing key drivers of peer-to-peer lending expansion in US counties, including bank weakness, market structure, and socio-economic factors, based on Prosper and Lending Club data.
Paper - Session 2 - Nicola Gabarino.pdf
Study analysing how Basel II’s internal models vs. standardised approach for mortgage risk weights led to risk specialisation and systemic concentration of high-risk mortgages in UK lenders with less sophisticated risk management, impacting capital framework design.