ESMA LIBRARY
REFINE YOUR SEARCH
Sections
- (-) Remove Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors filter Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors
- (-) Remove Post Trading filter Post Trading
- (-) Remove Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group filter Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group
- (-) Remove IAS Regulation filter IAS Regulation
- Press Releases (324) Apply Press Releases filter
- CESR Archive (249) Apply CESR Archive filter
- Credit Rating Agencies (55) Apply Credit Rating Agencies filter
- Fund Management (43) Apply Fund Management filter
- MiFID - Investor Protection (33) Apply MiFID - Investor Protection filter
- Board of Supervisors (30) Apply Board of Supervisors filter
- Corporate Disclosure (29) Apply Corporate Disclosure filter
- MiFID - Secondary Markets (28) Apply MiFID - Secondary Markets filter
- Corporate Information (27) Apply Corporate Information filter
- Joint Committee (26) Apply Joint Committee filter
- Supervisory convergence (26) Apply Supervisory convergence filter
- IFRS Supervisory Convergence (24) Apply IFRS Supervisory Convergence filter
- Management Board (24) Apply Management Board filter
- Brexit (14) Apply Brexit filter
- Benchmarks (13) Apply Benchmarks filter
- Trade Repositories (12) Apply Trade Repositories filter
- CCP Directorate (9) Apply CCP Directorate filter
- Innovation and Products (9) Apply Innovation and Products filter
- Sustainable finance (9) Apply Sustainable finance filter
- Market Integrity (8) Apply Market Integrity filter
- Market Abuse (7) Apply Market Abuse filter
- Planning reporting budget (7) Apply Planning reporting budget filter
- Prospectus (7) Apply Prospectus filter
- Short Selling (7) Apply Short Selling filter
- Securitisation (6) Apply Securitisation filter
- Warnings and publications for investors (6) Apply Warnings and publications for investors filter
- Corporate Governance (5) Apply Corporate Governance filter
- COVID-19 (4) Apply COVID-19 filter
- Board of Appeal (3) Apply Board of Appeal filter
- Guidelines and Technical standards (3) Apply Guidelines and Technical standards filter
- International cooperation (3) Apply International cooperation filter
- Securities Financing Transactions (3) Apply Securities Financing Transactions filter
- Transparency (3) Apply Transparency filter
- Audit (2) Apply Audit filter
- European Single Electronic Format (2) Apply European Single Electronic Format filter
- Market data (2) Apply Market data filter
- Trading (2) Apply Trading filter
- Corporate Finance (1) Apply Corporate Finance 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
- Reference (193) Apply Reference filter
- Letter (126) Apply Letter filter
- SMSG Advice (89) Apply SMSG Advice filter
- Final Report (85) Apply Final Report filter
- Report (84) Apply Report filter
- Consultation Paper (55) Apply Consultation Paper filter
- Summary of Conclusions (42) Apply Summary of Conclusions filter
- Statement (38) Apply Statement filter
- Opinion (19) Apply Opinion filter
- Speech (16) Apply Speech filter
- Technical Advice (16) Apply Technical Advice filter
- Guidelines & Recommendations (15) Apply Guidelines & Recommendations filter
- Technical Standards (8) Apply Technical Standards filter
- Compliance table (7) Apply Compliance table filter
- Q&A (7) Apply Q&A filter
- Annual Report (3) Apply Annual Report filter
- Decision (3) Apply Decision filter
Date | Ref. | Title | Section | Type | Download | Info | Summary | Related Documents | Translated versions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
03/10/2013 | 2013/1400 | 20 September 2013 meeting of the Principals of the OTC Derivative Regulators Group | Post Trading, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 86.63 KB |
Principals and senior representatives of authorities responsible for the regulation of the over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives markets in Australia, Brazil, the European Union, Hong Kong, Japan, Ontario, Québec, Singapore, Switzerland and the United States met on 20 September 2013 at the headquarters of the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) in Paris. The Principals and representatives include: · Steven Maijoor, Chair of the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA); · Greg Medcraft, Chairman of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission; · Leonardo Pereira, Chairman of the Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (Brazil); · Patrick Pearson, Acting Director at the European Commission; · Ashley Alder, Chief Executive Officer of the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission; · Masamichi Kono, Vice-Commissioner of the Japan Financial Services Agency; · Howard Wetston, Chair of the Ontario Securities Commission; · Anne Héritier Lachat, Chair of the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority; · Gary Gensler, Chairman of the United States Commodity Futures Trading Commission; · Mary Jo White, Chair of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission; · Chuan Teck Lee, Assistant Managing Director at the Monetary Authority of Singapore; · Louis Morisset, President and CEO, l’Autorité des marchés financiers du Québec. The Principals discussed generally: the application of clearing requirements to foreign branches and affiliates; risk mitigation techniques for non-centrally cleared derivatives transactions, such as timely confirmation, portfolio reconciliation, portfolio compression, valuation and dispute resolution; the need to co-operate in the implementation of internationally agreed standards on margin for non-centrally cleared derivatives transactions; co-operation on equivalence and substituted compliance assessments among the relevant authorities; and co-operation between authorities in the supervision of registered foreign entities; The Principals agreed to meet again in February to continue the discussion of the above points. |
|||
13/07/2020 | ESMA71-99-1352 | 3rd EU-wide CCP stress test results PR | CCP Directorate, Post Trading, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 151.99 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. | |||
04/02/2019 | ESMA71-99-1107 | ESMA agrees no-deal Brexit MOUs with the Bank of England for recognition of UK CCPs and the UK CSD | Brexit, Post Trading, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 131.3 KB |
||||
13/10/2016 | 2016 IFRS Press Release | ESMA and IFRS® Foundation strengthen cooperation | Corporate Information, IAS Regulation, IFRS Supervisory Convergence | Press Release | PDF 213.42 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 |
||||
14/04/2016 | 2016/625 | ESMA announces EU-wide stress tests for CCPs | Post Trading, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 168.16 KB |
||||
04/12/2018 | ESMA71-99-1069 | ESMA appoints a new Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group | Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group | Press Release | PDF 162.11 KB |
||||
01/07/2016 | 2016/1066 | ESMA appoints new Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group | Press Releases, Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group | Press Release | PDF 156.76 KB |
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has published the new list of members of its Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group (SMSG) following its approval by its Board of Supervisors. The selected individuals begin a 2½ year term on 1 July 2016 and will replace the group whose mandate expired on 30 June 2016. The new SMSG will be composed of 30 individuals drawn from across 13 Member States and representing ESMA’s key stakeholder constituencies – financial market participants (10), employee representatives (2), consumer representatives (6), users of financial services (3), small and medium sized enterprises (2) and academics (7). The new SMSG will feature 27 new members. A number of the incoming members have served in the previous SMSG. The SMSG was established according to ESMA’s founding regulation and facilitates consultation between ESMA and its key financial market stakeholders on its work. The SMSG provides ESMA with opinions and advice on its policy work and must be consulted on technical standards and guidelines and recommendations. Additionally, it can inform ESMA of any inconsistent application of European Union law as well as inconsistent supervisory practices in Member States. |
|||
12/12/2013 | 2013/1909 | ESMA appoints new Securities Markets Stakeholders Group members | Press Releases, Securities and Markets Stakeholder Group | Press Release | PDF 108.69 KB |
ESMA appoints new Securities Markets Stakeholders Group members The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has announced the composition of its Securities Markets Stakeholder Group (SMSG) following its approval by ESMA’s Board of Supervisors. These individuals will begin a term of 2½ years on 1 January 2014 and will replace the group whose mandate expires on 31 December 2013. The new SMSG will be composed of 30 individuals drawn from across 17 Member States and representing ESMA’s key stakeholder constituencies – consumer representatives (4), users of financial services (5), financial market participants (10), financial institution employees (2), small and medium sized enterprises (1) and academics (8). A number of the incoming members have previously served in the first SMSG. The SMSG was set up to facilitate consultation with key financial market stakeholders on all aspects of ESMA’s work. The SMSG provides ESMA with opinions and advice on policy workstreams and must be consulted on technical standards and guidelines and recommendations. In addition, the Stakeholder Group is expected to notify ESMA of any inconsistent application of European Union law as well as inconsistent supervisory practices in the Member States. Steven Maijoor, ESMA Chair, said: “The SMSG makes an important contribution to ESMA’s policy development, providing us with timely and valuable input on how our regulatory activities may potentially affect the different users of financial markets. “We have enjoyed a very good working relationship with the outgoing members of the SMSG who, as well as contributing their views and experience to our policymaking discussions, have been pioneers in developing the role of their group as part of the new European System of Financial Supervision. I look forward to working with the SMSG’s new members on a host of challenging issues.” The SMSG meets at least four times a year, and in addition meets twice with ESMA’s Board of Supervisors. Their advice and opinions are published on ESMA’s website. | |||
02/06/2016 | 2016/743 | ESMA assesses usefulness of distributed ledger technologies | Innovation and Products, Press Releases, Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors | Press Release | PDF 152.48 KB |
||||
30/09/2016 | 2016/1411 | ESMA consults on future reporting rules for securities financing transactions | Post Trading, Press Releases, Securities Financing Transactions | Press Release | PDF 148.11 KB |
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has issued today a consultation paper on draft technical standards implementing the Securities Financing Transaction Regulation (SFTR), which aims to increase the transparency of shadow banking activities. Securities financing transactions (SFTs) are transactions where securities are used to borrow cash (or other higher investment-grade securities), or vice versa – this includes repurchase transactions, securities lending and sell/buy-back transactions. |
|||
13/07/2016 | 2016/1126 | ESMA consults on proposed central clearing delay for small financial counterparties | Post Trading, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 132.06 KB |
||||
28/05/2019 | ESMA71-99-1159 | ESMA consults on tiering comparable compliance and fees under EMIR 2.2 | Post Trading, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 89.98 KB |
||||
18/10/2018 | ESMA71-99-1027 | ESMA data analysis values EU derivatives market at €660 trillion with central clearing increasing significantly | Press Releases, Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors | Press Release | PDF 238.11 KB |
||||
23/12/2019 | ESMA71-99-1269 | ESMA extends recognition decisions for 3 UK CCPs | Post Trading | Press Release | PDF 85.15 KB |
||||
19/02/2020 | ESMA71-99-1284 | ESMA finds continued high risks as financial markets remain highly volatile | Press Releases, Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors | Press Release | PDF 94.61 KB |
||||
14/02/2013 | 2013/215 | ESMA issues first risk report on EU securities markets | Risk Analysis & Economics - Markets Infrastructure Investors, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 99.25 KB |
||||
03/04/2019 | ESMA71-99-1139 | ESMA launches third EU-wide CCP stress test exercise | Post Trading, Press Releases | Press Release | PDF 134.41 KB |