The objectives of private pension supervision focus on protecting the interests of pension fund members and beneficiaries, by promoting the stability, security and good governance of pension funds.
Browse the Compendium of Standards
320 results
1 November 2010
This document clarifies supervisory expectations on the range of industry AMA practices while promoting increased convergence in operational risk management.
1 October 2010
The goal of these principles is to reduce mechanistic reliance on ratings and to incentivise improvements in independent credit risk assessment and due diligence capacity.
9 September 2010
The Stockholm Principles” aim to help manage sovereign risk and high levels of public debt in an environment of elevated uncertainty.
1 August 2010
This report sets forth elements regarding principles pertinent to direct electronic access (DEA), including those that address pre-conditions for DEA, information flow, and adequate systems and controls and is intended to guide markets, intermediaries and regulators.
1 July 2010
IOSCO sets out a number of factors that are designed to assist market authorities when considering how to enhance post-trade transparency of SFPs in their respective jurisdictions.
This report distills the critical elements of supervisory cooperation into a set of principles designed to guide IOSCO members in developing cooperative supervisory arrangements amongst themselves, tailored to their own markets and circumstances, and their own legal powers and requirements.
The purpose of this paper is to encourage the establishment of sufficient supervisory power and authority to ensure that supervision has proper regard to all entities which may affect the overall risk profile and/or financial position of the group as a whole and/or the individual entities within the group; and to promote greater consistency between jurisdictions.
The disclosure topics highlighted in the ABS Disclosure Principles are intended as a starting point for consideration and analysis by securities regulators.
The Basel Committee’s Cross-border Bank Resolution Group (CBRG) developed the Recommendations as a product of its stocktaking of legal and policy frameworks for cross-border crises resolutions and its follow-up work to identify the lessons learned from the financial crisis which began in August 2007.