ESMA LIBRARY
REFINE YOUR SEARCH
Sections
- (-) Remove MiFID - Secondary Markets filter MiFID - Secondary Markets
- (-) Remove MiFID - Investor Protection filter MiFID - Investor Protection
- (-) Remove Post Trading filter Post Trading
- (-) Remove IFRS Supervisory Convergence filter IFRS Supervisory Convergence
- (-) Remove Supervisory convergence filter Supervisory convergence
- (-) Remove Market Abuse filter Market Abuse
- (-) Remove Audit filter Audit
- Market Integrity (37) Apply Market Integrity filter
- Short Selling (35) Apply Short Selling filter
- Brexit (32) Apply Brexit filter
- Corporate Disclosure (29) Apply Corporate Disclosure filter
- COVID-19 (29) Apply COVID-19 filter
- Fund Management (20) Apply Fund Management filter
- Press Releases (18) Apply Press Releases filter
- Credit Rating Agencies (17) Apply Credit Rating Agencies filter
- Corporate Information (16) Apply Corporate Information filter
- Board of Supervisors (14) Apply Board of Supervisors filter
- Innovation and Products (11) Apply Innovation and Products filter
- Joint Committee (11) Apply Joint Committee filter
- Benchmarks (7) Apply Benchmarks filter
- MiFID II: Transparency Calculations and DVC (7) Apply MiFID II: Transparency Calculations and DVC filter
- CESR Archive (6) Apply CESR Archive filter
- Prospectus (6) Apply Prospectus filter
- Warnings and publications for investors (6) Apply Warnings and publications for investors filter
- Trade Repositories (5) Apply Trade Repositories filter
- Corporate Governance (4) Apply Corporate Governance filter
- Securities Financing Transactions (4) Apply Securities Financing Transactions filter
- Speeches (4) Apply Speeches filter
- IAS Regulation (3) Apply IAS Regulation filter
- Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group (3) Apply Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group filter
- Securitisation (3) Apply Securitisation filter
- Corporate Finance (2) Apply Corporate Finance filter
- Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors (2) Apply Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors filter
- Trading (2) Apply Trading filter
- CCP Directorate (1) Apply CCP Directorate filter
- Guidelines and Technical standards (1) Apply Guidelines and Technical standards filter
- International cooperation (1) Apply International cooperation filter
- Management Board (1) Apply Management Board filter
- Sustainable finance (1) Apply Sustainable finance filter
- Transparency (1) Apply Transparency filter
Type of document
- (-) Remove Opinion filter Opinion
- (-) Remove Statement filter Statement
- Reference (220) Apply Reference filter
- Press Release (126) Apply Press Release filter
- Consultation Paper (108) Apply Consultation Paper filter
- Final Report (106) Apply Final Report filter
- Guidelines & Recommendations (106) Apply Guidelines & Recommendations filter
- Letter (90) Apply Letter filter
- Report (67) Apply Report filter
- Speech (37) Apply Speech filter
- Investor Warning (26) Apply Investor Warning filter
- Compliance table (24) Apply Compliance table filter
- Q&A (23) Apply Q&A filter
- Technical Advice (21) Apply Technical Advice filter
- Technical Standards (17) Apply Technical Standards filter
- Decision (8) Apply Decision filter
- Annual Report (6) Apply Annual Report filter
- Vacancy (2) Apply Vacancy filter
- CESR Document (1) Apply CESR Document filter
Date | Ref. | Title | Section | Type | Download | Info | Summary | Related Documents | Translated versions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
28/07/2011 | 2011/226 | Public statement- ESMA Statement on disclosures related to sovereign debt to be included in IFRS financial statements | Corporate Disclosure, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Statement | PDF 36.9 KB |
||||
25/11/2011 | 2011/397 | Public statement on sovereign debt in IFRS financial statements | Corporate Disclosure, Corporate Governance, IFRS Supervisory Convergence, Press Releases | Statement | PDF 189.46 KB |
||||
20/12/2012 | 2012/853 | Treatment of Forbearance Practices in IFRS Financial Statements of Financial Institutions | Corporate Disclosure, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Statement | PDF 220.43 KB |
||||
11/11/2013 | 2013/1634 | European common enforcement priorities for 2013 financial statements | Corporate Disclosure, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Statement | PDF 152.24 KB |
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has published its European Common Enforcement Priorities (Priorities) for 2013. These Priorities are to be used by European Economic Area (EEA) national authorities in their assessment of listed companies’ 2013 financial statements. ESMA has defined these Priorities in order to promote the consistent application of IFRS across the EEA. Listed companies and their auditors should take account of the areas set out in the Priorities when preparing and auditing the IFRS financial statements for the year ending 31 December 2013. The Priorities identified refer to the application of IFRS in relation to: • Impairment of non-financial assets; • Measurement and disclosure of post-employment benefit obligations; • Fair value measurement and disclosure; • Disclosures related to significant accounting policies, judgements and estimates; and • Measurement of financial instruments and disclosure of related risks. |
|||
15/03/2013 | 2013/312 | Regulatory technical standards on colleges for central counterparties supplementing Regulation (EU) No 648/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 4 July 2012 | Post Trading | Opinion | PDF 151.67 KB |
||||
28/10/2014 | 2014/1309 | Public Statement- European common enforcement priorities for 2014 financial statements | Corporate Disclosure, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Statement | PDF 207.62 KB |
The European Securities and Markets Authority (‘ESMA’) issues this Public Statement which defines the European common enforcement priorities in order to promote consistent application of the International Financial Reporting Standards (‘IFRS’) as indicated in the ESMA Guidelines on enforcement of financial information.As in the previous years, ESMA, together with European national enforcers, identified financial reporting topics which, listed companies and their auditors should particularly consider when preparing and auditing, respectively, the IFRS financial statements for the year ending 31 December 2014. In addition to these common priorities, national enforcers might also set additional enforcement priorities focusing on other relevant topics.ESMA, together with the European national enforcers, will pay particular attention to these common enforcement priorities as well as priorities identified in previous years, when monitoring and assessing the application of all relevant IFRS requirements. National enforcers will continue to focus on material issues in the financial statements that are relevant for an individual issuer under examination. On the basis of examinations performed, national enforcers will take corrective actions whenever material misstatements are identified. ESMA will report on findings regarding these priorities in its Report on the 2015 enforce-ment activities. |
|||
07/02/2014 | 2014/146 | MiFID practices for firms selling complex products | MiFID - Investor Protection, Warnings and publications for investors | Opinion | PDF 122.37 KB |
||||
27/03/2014 | 2014/332 | Structured Retail Products- Good practices for product governance arrangements | MiFID - Investor Protection, Innovation and Products | Opinion | PDF 203.1 KB |
Legal basis 1. Regulation (EU) No 1095/2010 (ESMA Regulation) sets out the European Securities and Markets Authority’s (ESMA) scope of action, tasks and powers which include “enhancing customer protection”, and “foster[ing] investor protection”. 2. In order to continue delivering on this investor protection statutory objective, ESMA is issuing this opinion on certain aspects linked to the manufacturing and distribution of structured retail products (SRP). This opinion takes into account relevant work done in this field both at European and interna-tional level. 3. This opinion is without prejudice to the requirements for the provision of investment services and activities established in the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) and its implementing measures (notably, Directive 2006/73/EC), the regulatory developments arising from the MiFID review or existing product rules that may apply to SRPs. 4. ESMA’s competence to deliver an opinion is based on Article 29(1) (a) of the ESMA Regulation. In accordance with Article 44(1) of the ESMA Regulation, the Board of Supervisors has adopted this opinion. Background 5. In its July 2013 report on ‘Retailisation in the EU’ , ESMA highlighted that, from a consumer protec-tion perspective, retail investors may face difficulties in understanding the drivers of risks and returns of structured products. If retail investors do not properly understand the risk and reward profile of structured products, and if the products are not properly assessed against the risk appetite of retail investors, retail investors might be exposed to unexpected losses and this might lead to complaints, reputational risks for manufacturers and distributors, and a loss of confidence in the regulatory framework and, more broadly, in financial markets. 6. In 2013, ESMA mapped the measures adopted in the EU Member States in relation to complex products in order to identify issues and to better understand the rationale behind national initiatives (by looking at similarities and differences in the various approaches, and reviewing how complexity has been treated in the different EU Members States). 7. As a result, ESMA has developed a broad set of non-exhaustive examples of good practices, attached as Annex 1 hereto, illustrating arrangements that firms - taking into account the nature, scale and complexity of their business - could put in place to improve their ability to deliver on investor protection regarding, in particular, (i) the complexity of the SRPs they manufacture or distribute, (ii) the nature and range of the investment services and activities undertaken in the course of that business, and (iii) the type of investors they target. These good practices should also be a helpful tool for competent authorities in carrying out their supervisory action. Opinion 8. ESMA considers that sound product governance arrangements are fundamental for investor protec-tion purposes, and can reduce the need for product intervention actions by competent authorities. 9. ESMA considers that, when supervising firms manufacturing or distributing an SRP, competent authorities should promote, in their supervisory approaches, the examples of good practices for firms set out in Annex 1 hereto. 10. Although the good practices set out in Annex 1 hereto focus on structured products sold to retail investors, ESMA considers that they may also be a relevant reference for other types of financial in-struments (such as asset-backed securities, or contingent convertible bonds), as well as when financial instruments are being sold to professional clients. 11. The exposure to risk is an intrinsic feature of investment products. The good practices set out in Annex 1 refer to product governance arrangements and do not (and cannot) aim at removing investment risk from products. | |||
28/05/2014 | 2014/576 | Voting Procedures for CCP colleges under EMIR | Post Trading | Opinion | PDF 94.15 KB |
||||
25/09/2015 | 2015/1462 | ESMA opinion on accounting for Deposit Guarantee Scheme | Corporate Disclosure, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Opinion | PDF 127.91 KB |
||||
27/10/2015 | 2015/1608 | Public Statement- ECEP 2015 | Corporate Disclosure, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Statement | PDF 210.15 KB |
||||
27/10/2015 | 2015/1609 | Public Statement- Improving Disclosures | Corporate Disclosure, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Statement | PDF 169.77 KB |
||||
19/11/2015 | 2015/1750 | EMIR statement re bank guarantees energy market | Post Trading | Statement | PDF 111.67 KB |
||||
29/01/2015 | 2015/223 | Opinion on draft RTS on the Clearing Obligation | Post Trading | Opinion | PDF 601.97 KB |
Legal Basis According to Article 5(2) of Regulation (EU) No 648/2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 4 July 2012 on OTC derivatives, central counterparties and trade repositories (EMIR), the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) shall develop draft regulatory technical standards specifying the class of OTC derivatives that should be subject to the clearing obligation, the date or dates from which the clearing obligation takes effect, including any phase in and the categories of counterparties to which the obligation applies, and the minimum remaining maturity of the OTC derivative contracts referred to in Article 4(1)(b)(ii) of EMIR. Background and Procedure On 1 October 2014, ESMA submitted a draft regulatory technical standard (RTS) on the clearing obligation to the European Commission pursuant to Article 10(1) of Regulation No (EU) 1095/2010 (the ESMA Regulation) and Article 5(2) of EMIR. This draft RTS covered Interest Rate Swaps. On 18 December 2014, the Commission informed ESMA of its intention to endorse with amendments this draft RTS and submitted to ESMA a modified version of the RTS (the “modified RTS”) introducing, among others, (1) amendments to the date on which the frontloading obligation starts to apply and (2) a new provision on the treatment of non-EU intragroup transactions. Pursuant to Article 10(1) of the ESMA Regulation, this notification from the Commission opens a period of six weeks during which ESMA may amend its draft RTS on the clearing obligation on the basis of the Commission’s proposed amendments and resubmit it to the Commission in the form of a formal opinion. ESMA has to send a copy of its formal opinion to the European Parliament and to the Council. In accordance with Article 44(1) of the ESMA Regulation the Board of Supervisors has to adopt a formal opinion. Executive Summary ESMA agrees with the ultimate objectives of the modifications that the European Commission intends to introduce. However, ESMA considers that the tool proposed by the Commission for the matter related to the non-EU intra group transactions is not appropriate from a legal perspective and, in the case that the Commission intention is to define a later application date for those transactions, ESMA stands ready to explore, in coordination with the Commission, a different manner to incorporate that provision. ESMA backs the modifications on the frontloading section, though has a few observations and improvements with respect to several recitals. ESMA proposes to incorporate the suggestion of the Commission to deal with the application of the 8 billion threshold to investment funds for the definitions of types of counterparties as a specific provision in the text of the RTS. |
|||
09/03/2015 | 2015/511 | Revised opinion on draft RTS on the clearing obligation on interest rate swaps | Post Trading | Opinion | PDF 336.52 KB |
||||
21/05/2015 | 2015/838 | ESMA's opinion on the composition of CCP colleges under EMIR | Post Trading | Opinion | PDF 131.98 KB |
||||
10/11/2016 | 2016-1563 | Issues for consideration in implementing IFRS 9: Financial Instruments | Audit, Corporate Disclosure, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Statement | PDF 256.22 KB |
||||
10/02/2016 | 2016-278 | EU-US approach CCP equivalence | Post Trading, Press Releases | Statement | PDF 97.22 KB |
||||
07/07/2016 | 2016/1073 | Opinion on the exemption for Swedish pension scheme | Post Trading | Opinion | PDF 203.12 KB |
||||
20/07/2016 | 2016/1148 | Public Statement Issues for consideration in implementing IFRS 15 | IAS Regulation, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Statement | PDF 373.45 KB |