ESMA LIBRARY
The ESMA Library contains all ESMA documents. Please use the search and filter options to find specific documents.
123
REFINE YOUR SEARCH
Sections
- (-) Remove Credit Rating Agencies filter Credit Rating Agencies
- (-) Remove MiFID - Investor Protection filter MiFID - Investor Protection
- (-) Remove Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors filter Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors
- (-) Remove Sustainable finance filter Sustainable finance
- Press Releases (301) Apply Press Releases filter
- CESR Archive (249) Apply CESR Archive filter
- Fund Management (49) Apply Fund Management filter
- Guidelines and Technical standards (36) Apply Guidelines and Technical standards filter
- MiFID - Secondary Markets (32) Apply MiFID - Secondary Markets filter
- Post Trading (32) Apply Post Trading filter
- Corporate Disclosure (30) Apply Corporate Disclosure filter
- Joint Committee (26) Apply Joint Committee filter
- Supervisory convergence (25) Apply Supervisory convergence filter
- IFRS Supervisory Convergence (24) Apply IFRS Supervisory Convergence filter
- Board of Supervisors (19) Apply Board of Supervisors filter
- Corporate Information (19) Apply Corporate Information filter
- Management Board (16) Apply Management Board filter
- Brexit (14) Apply Brexit filter
- Benchmarks (13) Apply Benchmarks filter
- Market Abuse (10) Apply Market Abuse filter
- Trade Repositories (10) Apply Trade Repositories filter
- Market Integrity (9) Apply Market Integrity filter
- Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group (9) Apply Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group filter
- Innovation and Products (8) Apply Innovation and Products filter
- Short Selling (8) Apply Short Selling filter
- Prospectus (6) Apply Prospectus filter
- Warnings and publications for investors (6) Apply Warnings and publications for investors filter
- Corporate Governance (5) Apply Corporate Governance filter
- Planning reporting budget (5) Apply Planning reporting budget filter
- CCP Directorate (4) Apply CCP Directorate filter
- COVID-19 (4) Apply COVID-19 filter
- Board of Appeal (3) Apply Board of Appeal filter
- IAS Regulation (3) Apply IAS Regulation filter
- International cooperation (3) Apply International cooperation filter
- Securitisation (3) Apply Securitisation filter
- Transparency (3) Apply Transparency filter
- Audit (2) Apply Audit filter
- European Single Electronic Format (2) Apply European Single Electronic Format filter
- Securities Financing Transactions (2) Apply Securities Financing Transactions filter
- Trading (2) Apply Trading filter
- Corporate Finance (1) Apply Corporate Finance filter
- Market data (1) Apply Market data filter
- MiFID II: Transparency Calculations and DVC (1) Apply MiFID II: Transparency Calculations and DVC filter
Type of document
- (-) Remove Press Release filter Press Release
- (-) Remove Compliance table filter Compliance table
- Reference (126) Apply Reference filter
- Guidelines & Recommendations (118) Apply Guidelines & Recommendations filter
- Final Report (66) Apply Final Report filter
- CLOSED Procedure (62) Apply CLOSED Procedure filter
- Opinion (58) Apply Opinion filter
- Report (55) Apply Report filter
- Consultation Paper (54) Apply Consultation Paper filter
- Statement (36) Apply Statement filter
- Decision (27) Apply Decision filter
- Investor Warning (26) Apply Investor Warning filter
- Speech (18) Apply Speech filter
- Letter (15) Apply Letter filter
- Technical Advice (14) Apply Technical Advice filter
- Annual Report (8) Apply Annual Report filter
- Technical Standards (6) Apply Technical Standards filter
- Q&A (5) Apply Q&A filter
- ONGOING Procedure (4) Apply ONGOING Procedure filter
- SMSG Advice (2) Apply SMSG Advice filter
Your filters
MiFID - Investor Protection X Credit Rating Agencies X Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors X Procurement X Sustainable finance X Compliance table X Press Release X
Reset all filtersDate | Ref. | Title | Section | Type | Download | Info | Summary | Related Documents | Translated versions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
04/01/2021 | ESMA71-99-1498 | Brexit: ESMA withdraws the registrations of six UK-based credit rating agencies and four trade repositories | Brexit, Credit Rating Agencies, Press Releases, Trade Repositories | Press Release | PDF 94.63 KB |
||||
11/02/2020 | ESMA35-43-1076 | Compliance table for Guidelines on MiFID II product governance requirements (ESMA35-43-620) | Guidelines and Technical standards, MiFID - Investor Protection | Compliance table | PDF 157.54 KB |
||||
06/11/2018 | ESMA35-43-1215 | Compliance table for Joint ESMA and EBA Guidelines on the assessment of the suitability of members of the management body | Guidelines and Technical standards, Joint Committee, MiFID - Investor Protection | Compliance table | PDF 293.08 KB |
||||
20/06/2019 | ESMA35-43-1430 | Compliance table on Guidelines on MiFID II suitability requirements | Guidelines and Technical standards, MiFID - Investor Protection | Compliance table | PDF 145.71 KB |
||||
24/04/2014 | 2013/923 | Compliance table- compliance guidelines | Guidelines and Technical standards, MiFID - Investor Protection | Compliance table | PDF 100.87 KB |
||||
27/05/2020 | ESMA35-43-2183 | Compliance table- Guidelines for the assessment of knowledge and competence (ESMA/2015/1886) | Guidelines and Technical standards, MiFID - Investor Protection | Compliance table | PDF 161.38 KB |
||||
10/03/2020 | ESMA35-43-1957 | Compliance table- Guidelines on complex debt instruments and structured deposits (ESMA/2015/1787) | Guidelines and Technical standards, MiFID - Investor Protection | Compliance table | PDF 166.08 KB |
||||
10/03/2020 | ESMA35-43-1968 | Compliance table- Guidelines on cross-selling practices (ESMA/2016/574) | Guidelines and Technical standards, MiFID - Investor Protection | Compliance table | PDF 159.52 KB |
||||
24/04/2014 | 2013/922 | Compliance table- suitability guidelines | MiFID - Investor Protection, Guidelines and Technical standards | Compliance table | PDF 74.33 KB |
||||
30/03/2021 | ESMA71-99-1622 | CRA Enforcement Case Moodys March 2021 | Board of Supervisors, Credit Rating Agencies, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 134.39 KB |
||||
23/07/2018 | ESMA71-99-1017 | CRA fine- ESMA fines five banks | Credit Rating Agencies, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 223.54 KB |
||||
26/09/2017 | ESMA71-99-599 | EBA and ESMA provide guidance to assess the suitability of management body members and key function holders | Guidelines and Technical standards, Joint Committee, MiFID - Investor Protection, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 243.97 KB |
The European Banking Authority (EBA) and the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) have published their joint Guidelines to assess the suitability of members of management bodies and key function holders. |
|||
23/04/2020 | JC 2020 41 | ESAs consult on Environmental, Social and Governance disclosure rules | Joint Committee, Sustainable finance | Press Release | PDF 131.43 KB |
||||
05/05/2015 | JC/2015/02 | ESAs- main risks to EU financial market stability have intensified | Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors, Press Releases, Joint Committee | Press Release | PDF 125.34 KB |
The Joint Committee of the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) published its fifth Report on Risks and Vulnerabilities in the EU Financial System. Overall, the report found that in the past six months, risks affecting the EU financial system have not changed in substance, but have further intensified. The EU’s economic performance improved slightly in early 2015, however the financial sector in general continues to be affected by a combination of factors such as low investment demand, economic uncertainty in the Eurozone and its neighbouring countries, a global economic slow-down and a low-interest rate environment. The main risks affecting the financial system remain broadly unchanged from those identified in the report’s previous edition, but have become more entrenched. The major risks include: • Low growth, low inflation, volatile asset prices and their consequences for financial entities; • Search for yield behaviour exacerbated by potential rebounds; • Deterioration in the conduct of business; and • Increased concern about IT risks and cyber-attacks. Despite these risks, a number of ongoing policy and regulatory initiatives are contributing to improving the stability and confidence in the financial system as well as facilitating additional funding channels to the real economy. These include ongoing regulatory reforms in the securities, banking and insurance sectors such as the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II) and Regulation (MiFIR), the work on the implementation of the Capital Requirements Directive and Regulation (CRDIV/CRR), the work on the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD), the Deposit-Guarantee Schemes Directive (DGS) and the Solvency II Directive, as well as the European Commission’s plan for a Capital Markets Union (CMU). Steven Maijoor, Chair of the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) and the current Chairman of the Joint Committee, said: “The Joint Committee has noted some improvement in overall market conditions; however, the recovery is not yet sustained and is exposed to risks related to broad macroeconomic conditions, in particular the low interest environment and resulting search-for-yield behaviour. Additionally regulators continue to have concerns about the operational risks generated by some financial institutions’ inappropriate business conduct, as well as those risks posed by inadequate management of IT risks. “However, recent regulatory initiatives across the banking, insurance and securities sectors, such as the Comprehensive Assessment, the insurance sector stress test and Solvency II along with, the ongoing MiFID, EMIR and PRIPS reforms are contributing to improving the stability and confidence in the EU financial system." Key Risks Identified The identified risks in the Report can be divided into macro risks to the EU financial system and economy and operational risks. Macro Risks The key macro risks identified relate to: 1. Risks from weak economic growth and low inflation environment, which include: • Adverse effect that low interest rates and uncertainties about the economic recovery have had on the outlook for the financial industry; • Higher valuation and market liquidity risk has raised concerns about the outlook for financial entities’ stability in the event of reversals in interest rates and asset prices; 2. Low profitability is motivating financial institutions and other investors to search for yield, which requires increased supervisory attention to the viability of business models, related restructuring activity and adequate management of risks. However, the promotion of sound and innovative business models for market-based funding structures could help to deliver additional stimulus; and 3. Some continued doubts on the comparability and consistency of banks’ calculations of risk weighted assets. Operational Risks The key operational risks relate to: 4. Business conduct risk remains a key concern with the Report recommending that supervisors should include misconduct costs in future stress tests where appropriate, while financial institutions should strengthening product oversight and governance frameworks. Further improvements in the regulatory framework and supervisory practices to address conduct risks are also warranted. In addition, further progress needs to be made on benchmark reforms where continuity and integrity remain a source of concern even if key panels remained stable; and 5. IT operational risk and cyber risk remain of great concern and pose challenges to the the safety and integrity of financial institutions. IT risk increased due to costs pressures, outsourcing, the need for additional capacities and a mounting number of cyber-attacks. The adequate integration of IT risk into overall risk management is a key policy for mitigation. | |||
15/03/2012 | 2012/158 | ESMA allows EU-registered CRAs to endorse credit ratings issued in the US, Canada, Hong Kong and Singapore | Credit Rating Agencies | Press Release | PDF 189.93 KB |
ESMA today announces that it considers the regulatory frameworks for credit rating agencies (CRAs) of the United States of America, Canada, Hong Kong and Singapore to be in line with European rules. The EU Regulation (EC) No 1060/2009 on Credit Rating Agencies1 requires ESMA to assess whether the requirements of third-country CRA regimes are “as stringent as” the European ones. Today’s announcement allows European financial institutions to continue using for regulatory purposes credit ratings issued in these countries after 30 April 2012. ESMA’s assessment of third-country CRA regimes is an important tool for enhancing internationally consistent supervision of CRAs in the interests of protecting financial markets and investors in the EU. | |||
01/02/2019 | ESMA71-99-1096 | ESMA and EU securities regulators MoUs with FCA | Board of Supervisors, Brexit, Credit Rating Agencies, Fund Management, Press Releases, Trade Repositories | Press Release | PDF 80.5 KB |
||||
06/06/2013 | 2013/684 | ESMA and the EBA publish final principles on benchmarks | Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors, Press Releases, Benchmarks | Press Release | PDF 125.48 KB |
||||
11/01/2013 | 2013/13 | ESMA and the EBA take action to strengthen Euribor and benchmark rate-setting processes | Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 207.75 KB |
||||
28/02/2013 | 2013/266 | ESMA and the EBA warn investors about contracts for difference | MiFID - Investor Protection, Warnings and publications for investors, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 119.01 KB |
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) and the European Banking Authority (EBA) have published a warning to retail investors about the dangers of investing in contracts for difference (CFDs).The two authorities are concerned that during the current period of low investment returns, inexperienced retail investors across the EU are being tempted to invest in complex financial products, which they may not fully understand and which can end up costing them money they cannot afford to lose.Andrea Enria and Steven Maijoor, Chairs of the EBA and ESMA, warned:“Retail investors across the EU should be aware of all the risks arising from investing in CFDs. These products appear to promise investors substantial returns at a low cost but may ultimately cost them far more than they may have intended or could afford to lose.“CFDs are complex products that are not suitable for all types of investors, therefore you should always make sure that you understand how the product you are buying works, that it does what you want it to do and that you are in a position to take the loss if it fails.”Investors trading CFDs should protect themselvesInvestors should only consider trading in CFDs if they have extensive experience of trading in volatile markets, if they fully understand how these operate and have sufficient time to manage their investment on an active basis.Investors should carefully read their agreement or contract with the CFD provider before making a trading decision. They should make sure that they at least understand the following: • the costs of trading CFDs with the CFD provider, • whether the CFD provider will disclose the margins it makes on their trades, • how the prices of the CFDs are determined by the CFD provider, • what happens if they hold their position open overnight, • whether the CFD provider can change or re-quote the price once an investor places an order, • whether the CFD provider will execute investor’s orders even if the underlying market is closed, • whether there is an investor or deposit protection scheme in place in the event of counterparty or client asset issues.If investors do not understand what’s on offer, they should not trade. Further information Always check if the CFD provider is authorised to do investment business in your country. You can check this on the website of the CFD provider’s national regulator. A list of all the national regulatory authorities, and their websites, is also available from:• ESMA at http://www.esma.europa.eu/investor-corner; and • EBA at http://www.eba.europa.eu/Publications/Consumer-Protection-Issues.aspx.The investor warning on CFDs will be translated into the official EU languages.Concurrently with the publication of this warning, the EBA is addressing an internal Opinion under Art. 29 of the EBA Regulations to national supervisory authorities on the prudential supervision of CFDs. Notes for editors1. ESMA/2013/267 Investor Warning – Contracts for Difference (CFDs)2. ESMA and the EBA are independent EU Authorities that were established on 1 January 2011 and work closely with the European other European Supervisory Authority responsible for insurance and occupational pensions (EIOPA).3. ESMA’s mission is to enhance the protection of investors and promote stable and well-functioning financial markets in the European Union (EU). As an independent institution, ESMA achieves this aim by building a single rule book for EU financial markets and ensuring its consistent application across the EU. ESMA contributes to the regulation of financial services firms with a pan-European reach, either through direct supervision or through the active co-ordination of national supervisory activity.4. The EBA has a broad remit in the areas of banking, payments and e-money regulation, as well as on issues related to corporate governance, auditing and financial reporting. Its tasks include the protection of consumers and depositors, preventing regulatory arbitrage, guaranteeing a level playing field (especially by building a single rule book for the European banking system) strengthening international supervisory coordination, promoting supervisory convergence and providing advice to EU institutions. Further information:Reemt SeibelESMA Communications Officer Tel: +33 (0)1 58 36 4272Mob: +33 6 42 48 55 29Email: reemt.seibel@esma.europa.eu David CliffeESMA Senior Communications OfficerTel: +33 (0)1 58 36 43 24Mob: +33 6 42 48 29 06Email: david.cliffe@esma.europa.euRomain SadetEBA Communications Officer Tel: +44 (0) 207 997 5914Mob: +44 (0) 7785 463278 Email: romain.sadet@eba.europa.eu Franca CongiuEBA Communications OfficerTel: +44 (0) 207 382 1781Mob: +44 (0) 7771 376395Email: francarosa.congiu@eba.europa.eu | |||
18/04/2012 | 2012/256 | ESMA approves credit ratings from Argentina and Mexico for use in the EU | Credit Rating Agencies, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 186.59 KB |
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) announces today that it considers the regulatory frameworks for credit rating agencies (CRAs) of Argentina and Mexico to be in line with European Union rules. Today’s announcement allows European financial institutions to continue using credit ratings issued in these countries for regulatory purposes after 30 April 2012.In order to facilitate regulatory information exchange, and as a precondition to endorsement, ESMA has entered into co-operation agreements for the supervision of CRAs with the national competent authorities of Argentina and Mexico. Ratings issued under the regulatory frameworks of Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and the United States have already been approved for use in the EU. |