Publications

860 results

FSB Chair Letter to G20 Leaders on Progress of Financial Regulatory Reforms

Identifying the Effects of Regulatory Reforms on Emerging Market and Developing Economies: A Review of Potential Unintended Consequences

At the request of the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors, the FSB, in collaboration with the IMF and World Bank, has prepared this study to identify the extent to which the agreed regulatory reforms may have unintended consequences for EMDEs. The intent of the study is not to re-open recent internationally agreed reforms […]

Third Progress Report on Implementation of OTC Derivatives Market Reforms

This is the FSB’s third progress report on implementation of OTC derivatives market reforms.

First progress report on compensation practices

This report describes the developments in implementing the FSB Principles and Standards (P&S) in their national regulation or supervisory guidance over the relatively short time period since the October 2011 thematic peer review.

FSB Report Global Legal Entity Identifier for Financial Markets

This report sets out recommendations and proposals to implement a global Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) system that will uniquely identify parties to financial transactions.

Financial Stability Board Charter (previous version)

Note: An amendment to the Annex A of the Charter (List of Members) was adopted and published on 26 March 2015.

Public responses to April 2012 consultative document Interim Report on Securities Lending and Repos

Public comments received on the interim report on securities lending and repos published in April 2012 . The feedback will serve as an input to FSB’s workstream on securities lending and repos.

FSB Report on Securities Lending and Repos: Market Overview and Financial Stability Issues

This consultative document reviews current market practices and has identified a number of issues that might pose risks to financial stability.Comments should be submitted by 25 May 2012 by email to [email protected] or post.

The Bilateral Complaint Handling Process

Extending the G-SIFI Framework to domestic systemically important banks