Since the onset of the financial crisis, national authorities and international bodies, with the FSB as a central locus of coordination, have advanced a major program of financial reforms, based on clear principles and timetables for implementation that seek to ensure that a crisis on this scale never happens again. This report details the global […]
Publications
12 November 2010
To G20 Leaders Progress of Financial Regulatory Reforms The Seoul Summit will mark the delivery of two central elements of the reform programme launched in Washington to create a sounder financial system and reduce systemic risk globally: a materially strengthened global framework for bank capital and liquidity, and a comprehensive policy framework to address the […]
This report recommends a policy framework for addressing the systemic and moral hazard risks associated with systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs).
1 November 2010
In the aftermath of the financial crisis, the FSB and the G20 Leaders have identified as a priority the need for more intense and effective supervision particularly as it relates to systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs). The level of supervision applied by national authorities must be commensurate with the potential destabilization risk that such firms […]
27 October 2010
The FSB has drawn up the following principles to reduce reliance on CRA ratings in standards, laws and regulations.
25 October 2010
This report sets out 21 recommendations to guide authorities in implementing the G20 Leaders’ commitments to reform global OTC derivatives markets.
27 September 2010
This report canvasses several issues where the experience of Mexico is relevant to the regulatory and supervisory challenges that other FSB members are facing.
18 August 2010
This report provides an analysis of the long-term economic impact (LEI) of the Basel Committee’s proposed capital and liquidity reforms. It assesses the economic benefits and costs of stronger capital and liquidity regulation in terms of their impact on output. The main benefits of a stronger financial system reflect a lower probability of banking crises […]
18 August 2010
In December 2009, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) proposed a set of measures to strengthen global capital and liquidity regulations. The aim of these measures is to improve the resilience of the financial system. The proposed reforms will generate substantial benefits by reducing both the frequency and intensity of financial crises, thereby lowering […]
9 July 2010