14 résultats pour « supervision »

BCBS publishes framework for voluntary disclosure of climate‑related financial risks

The BCBS has introduced a voluntary framework for jurisdictions to disclose climate-related financial risks. This framework blends qualitative and quantitative data for a comprehensive view of bank exposures, while offering flexibility due to evolving data. It encourages a holistic approach to understanding disclosure strengths and weaknesses. Implementation is left to individual jurisdictions, and the Committee will monitor developments to update the framework as needed.

EIOPA publishes its 2024 Annual Report

In 2024, despite global challenges like AI advancements, elections, geopolitical instability, climate events, and cyber threats, EIOPA focused on safeguarding the public interest in the European financial system. They successfully executed their work program, emphasizing sustainable insurance/pensions, digital transformation, consistent supervision, high-quality advice, and financial stability. EIOPA also initiated regulatory simplification, stressing prudence to maintain a robust framework, and will collaborate with the European Commission to enhance the Savings and Investment Union. Their ongoing commitment is to ensure a robust, resilient, and well-regulated industry for all stakeholders.

Digital Innovation and Banking Regulation

The EU aims to foster digital transformation across sectors by 2030 through legislation on AI, cloud computing, and crypto-assets. However, compared to ESG, banking regulation lacks a clear framework for managing digital risks and supervisory assessment. This paper discusses digital innovation in banking, proposing risk-based Pillar 2 prudential framework and harmonized Pillar 3 disclosures to address this gap.

Risk, Discretion, and Bank Supervision

"... the new Climate Risk Division will integrate climate risks into its supervision of regulated entities, support the industry’s growth in managing climate risks, coordinate with international, national, and state regulators, develop internal capacity on climate-related financial risks, support the capacity-building of peer regulators on climate-related supervision, and ensure fair access to financial services for all communities, especially those most impacted by climate change. "

The Valuation of Assets and Liabilities of (Re)Insurance Undertakings Under Solvency II

"The objective of this paper is to discuss the underlying principles and assumptions of valuation under Solvency II and to analyse concepts such as the best estimate and the cost-of-capital risk margin, hedgeable and non-hedgeable risks, market value of risk, as well as economic capital and expected and unexpected losses."