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Date | Ref. | Title | Section | Type | Download | Info | Summary | Related Documents | Translated versions |
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13/07/2020 | ESMA70-151-3190 | 3rd EU-Wide CCP Stress Test FAQ | CCP Directorate, Post Trading | Reference | DOCX 464.64 KB |
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15/02/2022 | ESMA32-384-5357 | Annex- Response to EC targeted consultation on the Listing Act | Market Abuse, MiFID - Investor Protection, Prospectus | Reference | PDF 836.77 KB |
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02/03/2021 | ESMA91-374-1021 | Application form- CCP PC CWG creation 2021 | CCP Directorate | Reference | DOCX 38.36 KB |
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18/12/2017 | ESMA 71-99-671 | Briefing note- Preparing for 2020: ESEF field tests and reporting manual | European Single Electronic Format | Reference | PDF 339.06 KB |
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02/03/2021 | ESMA 91-374-1019 | Call for expressions of interest- CCP PC CWG- 2021 | CCP Directorate | Reference | PDF 156.88 KB |
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06/08/2019 | ESMA74-361-75 | Call for interest DAG members | Market Integrity, Trading | Reference | PDF 167.88 KB |
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28/06/2017 | ESMA32-60-196 | Call for volunteers- Field test European Single Electronic format (ESEF) | Corporate Disclosure, European Single Electronic Format | Reference | PDF 251.41 KB |
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07/01/2021 | ESMA70-152-2534 | CFTC ESMA Enhanced MoU | CCP Directorate | Reference | PDF 322.97 KB |
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30/05/2017 | ESMA70-145-103 | Communication on launch of reference data submission under MAR | Market Abuse, Market Integrity | Opinion | PDF 132.12 KB |
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04/12/2019 | ESMA70-21038340-46 | Compliance table for the Guidelines on market making activities under the Short Selling Regulation | Guidelines and Technical standards, Market Integrity, Short Selling | Compliance table | PDF 267.48 KB |
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01/07/2021 | ESMA31-62-1409 | Compliance table GLs on Risk factors | Prospectus | Compliance table | PDF 131.48 KB |
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08/07/2021 | ESMA32-382-1157 | Compliance table on disclosure requirements under the Prospectus Regulation | Prospectus | Compliance table | PDF 124.29 KB |
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04/02/2019 | ESMA70-145-153 | Compliance table- MAR Guidelines on information relating to commodity derivatives markets or related spot markets for the purpose of the definition of inside information on commodity derivatives | Guidelines and Technical standards, Market Abuse, Market Integrity | Compliance table | PDF 179.29 KB |
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07/12/2020 | Conformance suite 2020 | Conformance suite 2020 | European Single Electronic Format | Reference | ZIP 1.88 MB |
Main document: 2020 ESEF conformance suite test files Related documents: ESMA32-60-681 ESEF conformance suite documentation ESMA32-60-680 ESEF conformance suite list of tests
Copyright notice © IFRS Foundation Copyright and database right in the IFRS Taxonomy Materials is being held by the IFRS Foundation. The IFRS Taxonomy Materials are produced using XBRL language with the permission of XBRL International. The IFRS Foundation shall not assert its rights in the IFRS Taxonomy Materials within the EEA towards the preparation and use of tagged IFRS financial statements in the context of application of IFRS Standards. The IFRS Foundation reserves all other rights, including but not limited to those outside the EEA. Commercial use including reproduction is strictly prohibited. For further information please contact the IFRS Foundation at www.ifrs.org |
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10/12/2021 | Conformance suite 2021 | Conformance Suite 2021 | European Single Electronic Format | Reference | ZIP 1.97 MB |
Main document: 2021 ESEF conformance suite test files Related documents: ESMA32-60-796 ESEF conformance suite documentation ESMA32-60-795 ESEF conformance suite list of tests
Copyright notice © IFRS Foundation Copyright and database right in the IFRS Taxonomy Materials is being held by the IFRS Foundation. The IFRS Taxonomy Materials are produced using XBRL language with the permission of XBRL International. The IFRS Foundation shall not assert its rights in the IFRS Taxonomy Materials within the EEA towards the preparation and use of tagged IFRS financial statements in the context of application of IFRS Standards. The IFRS Foundation reserves all other rights, including but not limited to those outside the EEA. Commercial use including reproduction is strictly prohibited. For further information please contact the IFRS Foundation at www.ifrs.org |
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27/05/2019 | ESMA70-151-1019 | Consolidated SFTR_Validation_Rules | Securities Financing Transactions | Reference | XLSX 120.19 KB |
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12/11/2013 | 2013/1643 | Cover Note- Public statement containing information on shareholder cooperation and acting in concert under the Takeover Bids Directive (ESMA/2013/1642) | Corporate Disclosure, Corporate Governance | Reference | PDF 145.01 KB |
In accordance with its mandate to take appropriate action in the context of takeover bids as per Article 1.3 of Regulation (EU) 1095/2010 (ESMA Regulation), ESMA is releasing a public statement on shareholder cooperation and acting in concert under the Takeover Bids Directive (Directive 2004/25/EC). This statement has been prepared following the review and report by the European Commission on the application of the Takeover Bids Directive and is based on information collected about the practices and application of that Directive. The statement has been prepared in order to help shareholders identify activities in relation to which they can cooperate (insofar as those activities are available to them under national company law), without that cooperation, in and of itself, leading to a conclusion that the shareholders are acting in concert and thus being at risk of having to make a mandatory bid under the Takeover Bids Directive. These activities are presented in the statement in the form of a “White List”. The statement has been prepared by the Takeover Bids Network, a permanent working group operating under the auspices of ESMA that promotes exchange of information on practices and application of the Takeover Bids Directive across the European Economic Area, thereby strengthening a common supervisory culture. The Takeover Bids Network is a specialist group composed of the national competent authorities appointed under the Takeover Bids Directive. The competent authorities represented on the ESMA Board of Supervisors are not in all cases appointed as competent authorities within the Takeover Bids Directive. The authorities not represented on the Board of Supervisors but competent within the area of takeovers are the Austrian Takeover Commission, the Irish Takeover Panel, the Oslo Stock Exchange of Norway, the Takeover Panel of Sweden and the Takeover Panel of the United Kingdom. These five authorities have contributed to the public statement and will have regard to it in the same manner as the other members of the Takeover Bids Network when assessing whether shareholders are acting in concert under their national takeover rules. | |||
13/04/2021 | ESMA70-145-1395 | DATA_templates TRs | Market Integrity, Post Trading | Reference | XLSX 53.23 KB |
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06/08/2019 | ESMA74-361-85 | DSC DAG application form | Market Integrity | Reference | DOCX 38.58 KB |
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11/01/2016 | 2016/28 | Emergency measure by the Greek HCMC under Section 1 of Chapter V of Regulation (EU) No 236/2012 on short selling and certain aspects of credit default swaps | Market Integrity, Short Selling | Opinion | PDF 38.78 KB |
Emergency measure by the Greek HCMC under Section 1 of Chapter V of Regulation (EU) No 236/2012 on short selling and certain aspects of credit default swaps
I.Legal basis
II.Previous measures adopted by the Hellenic Capital Market Commission (HCMC)
III.Present measure
IV.Opinion
On the adverse events or developments ESMA considers that adverse developments which constitute a serious threat to market confidence in Greece could be understood as having considerably decreased with the successful completion of the share capital increase of Attica bank as announced by that bank on the 30th December 2015. Attica Bank has been the last of the five banks to undertake the re-capitalisation process envisaged under Greek law. It represented less than 1 % of the total market capitalisation of the 5 re-capitalised banks before the Attica capital increase and less than 7% after the increase. It also stands for a very small fraction of the Greek banking sector. Not surprisingly, and unlike the other banks mentioned in paragraph 10 above, Attica Bank is not a significant supervised entity under the direct supervision of the ECB. Although acknowledging that the successful and full conclusion of all the Greek banks’ re-capitalisation is important in order to safeguard the stability of the financial system as a whole and of the Greek capital market, as well as the protection of investors, ESMA considers that given that the capital increase of Attica Bank is agreed, priced, subscribed and publicly announced on the 30th of December 2015, the threat to the financial stability of the bank, and more widely to the financial stability of the Greek financial market, is much less acute than in December 2015. ESMA notes that the trading of the newly issued shares further to the completed capital increase has not started yet and thus there is a risk of increased volatility in the relevant market and that the confidence in the concerned bank could be affected if price movements were extreme. However, the evolution of the stock price of Attica Bank during the last month does not point towards, on average, a significant downward pressure on the prices. The volatility observed on Attica Bank is relative to the currently volatile stock markets in the EU. In the trading figures of Attica Bank shares since late November 2015, it is evident that the trading volumes have reduced progressively but the price of the stock has not suffered from a downward price spiral. Only in one occasion (10 December2015) the stock price fell more than 10% in a single session. In general, looking at the last 30 trading sessions, the price has increased by 37%. In the last 10 trading sessions, the price has moved in an overall range (counting intraday minimum and maximum values) of 13% around the average closing price of the period. In terms of closing prices, the maximum fluctuation has been -3,97% since 22 December (observed on January 7 2016). Putting these moves in the context of quite volatile EU stock markets, linked to the international market trends, it is questionable whether the volatility of the stock price of Attica Bank could be qualified as extreme or even high. Obviously, one could argue that the price has found a support thanks, among other things, to the existing ban on short sales. While it is extremely difficult to isolate the price effect of the short selling ban with current data, it is ESMA’s view that, all in all, the pricing history of the stock does not give the impression of a highly fragile situation. The main risk related with extreme volatility in a re-capitalisation exercise arises when the issuance price of the new shares and the allotment of the volume to be subscribed is not yet complete. In that scenario, significant (downward) price movements can dis-incentivise the investors that were considering to subscribe to new shares or can affect the issuance price in a manner that the re-capitalisation (in terms of the effective amount of funds to be received by the bank) can be put at risk. Once the pricing and the subscription are firm, price moves have a much lower impact on the success prospects of a re-capitalisation. They mainly affect the willingness of the new investors to hold their new shares or to sell them when the new shares start to trade. But the effects of this process on the financial stability of the entity are much less direct than when the volatility scenario precedes the establishment of the price and of the allotment of the capital increase. The latter was the prevalent scenario in most of the other occasions in which the measures of the HCMC was extended and on which ESMA issued positive opinions in the past. In ESMA’s opinion, such scenarios should be distinguished from the case at hand. The question of whether the risk of falling prices on Attica Bank shares (which has not yet been observed) would endanger the orderly functioning of the whole Greek financial market and its integrity is not evident to ESMA, due to the small size of this particular institution and to the fact that the only pending element is the formal admission to trading of the new shares. On the appropriateness and proportionality of the proposed measure ESMA considers that the renewal of the emergency measure limited to the shares of Attica Bank is not appropriate and proportionate to address the above mentioned potential threat stemming from the volatility of the price of the market of Attica Bank shares. Given that the share capital increase of Attica Bank is firm and definitive as well as publicly known, ESMA considers that the prohibition of short sales in the shares of Attica Bank admitted to trading on the Athens Exchange will only serve the purpose of assisting in reducing market volatility until the final admission of the new shares and the first days of their trading. While this may be a positive goal, ESMA notes that the situation of Attica Bank is very different from the ones of the other Greek banks both in terms of quantitative significance with respect to financial stability (much smaller in the case of Attica Bank) and in terms of the timing in the process of re-capitalisation (given that only the final listing of the new shares is pending, as opposed to the fixing of the issuance price and the allotment of the subscriptions). ESMA is thus of the view that there are alternative tools and measures, including those provided by Article 23 of the Short Selling Regulation consisting in a short term restriction of short selling in case of a significant fall in price, to address extreme market volatility concerns, should this volatility materialise in the coming days and more specifically risks of a downward spiral of the price of Attica shares. Those measures would be in ESMA’s opinion more appropriate and proportionate to address the risks that would arise from that situation than a total ban on short sales. On the duration of the proposed measure Considering the above negative opinion on the appropriateness and proportionality of the measure, ESMA is not further assessing the duration of the proposed renewal.
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