Report on the monitoring of Additional Tier 1 instruments of EU institutions.pdf
Report on the monitoring of Additional Tier 1 instruments of EU institutions
Report on the monitoring of Additional Tier 1 instruments of EU institutions
EBA vacancy notice for a Seconded National Expert (Policy Expert) in Paris to support sustainable finance initiatives, including ESG risk integration, policy development, and regulatory standards under the EBA Action Plan on sustainable finance (2021).
The European Commission, the European Central Bank in its banking supervisory capacity (ECB Banking Supervision), the European Banking Authority (EBA) and the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) today issued a joint statement in which they strongly encourage market participants to use the time remaining until the cessation or loss of representativeness of USD LIBOR, GBP LIBOR, JPY LIBOR, CHF LIBOR and EUR LIBOR to substantially reduce their exposures to these rates. The statement also encourages market participants to cease using the 35 LIBOR settings, including USD LIBOR, as a reference rate in new contracts as soon as practicable and by 31 December 2021 at the latest. Participants are also called on to limit the use of any LIBOR setting published under a changed methodology and to include robust fallback clauses nominating alternative rates in all contracts referencing LIBOR. The European Commission, ESMA, ECB Banking Supervision and the EBA will monitor the situation and LIBOR exposures closely.
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published today its updated Report on the monitoring of Additional Tier 1 (AT1) instruments including an update on the monitoring of the implementation of the EBA’s Opinion on legacy instruments and its considerations on ESG capital bonds. The objective of this update is to further strengthen the robustness and quality of EU institutions’ own funds and eligible liabilities instruments.
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published today a Report on the treatment of incoming third country branches (TCB) under the national law of Member States. The Report, which is addressed to the European Parliament, the Council and the Commission, illustrates the results of a stock-taking exercise conducted with competent authorities about their national regulatory law/regulations and supervisory practices and a mapping of the TCBs established in the Member States. Considering the increased volume of activities carried out by TCBs in a context of regulatory fragmentation across the EU, the Report lays down 14 high-level policy recommendations for further harmonisation of EU law.
The European Banking Authority (EBA) launched today a public consultation to amend its Implementing Technical Standards (ITS) on Supervisory Reporting with regards to COREP and asset encumbrance reporting as well as the reporting for the purposes of identifying global systemically important institutions (G-SIIs). Among others, this consultation paper aims to enhance proportionality in the area of asset encumbrance reporting, as recommended by the EBA’s Report on the Study on the Cost of compliance with supervisory reporting requirements (CoC report). The consultation runs until 23 September 2021.
Presentation
Joint Public Statement on forthcoming cessation of all LIBOR settings
Consultation Paper on the ITS on Supervisory Reporting regarding COREP, AE and GSIIs
Annex 2 (Solvency).pdf
Report on the treatment of incoming third country branches under the national law of Member States
EBA Report on ESG risks management and supervision
ESG risks management and supervision factsheet
Annex 3 (Annex 16 - Asset Encumbrance).xlsx
Annex 1 (Solvency).xlsx
Annex 4 (Annex 17 - Asset Encumbrance).pdf
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published today its Report on Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) risks management and supervision. The Report, which is a key component of the EBA’s broader ESG work, provides a comprehensive proposal on how ESG factors and ESG risks should be included in the regulatory and supervisory framework for credit institutions and investment firms.