This paper reports on progress being made at the international and national levels in implementing the DGI recommendations and developing analytical work on new statistical frameworks.
28 responses to the Consultation paper were received - 11 from national and international industry associations, 14 from individual financial institutions, and 3 from other firms and private individuals. Only the comments from national and international industry associations are published here.
The Key Attributes are a new internationally-agreed standard that sets out the responsibilities, instruments and powers that national resolution regimes should have to resolve a SIFI as well as requirements for resolvability assessments and recovery and resolution planning for G-SIFIs.
Increasing the intensity and effectiveness of supervision is a key component of the Financial Stability Board's (FSB's) efforts to reduce the moral hazard posed by systemically important financial institutions (the "SIFI framework"), along with requiring added capital loss absorbency and facilitating the orderly resolution of firms. On November 1, 2010 the FSB, in consultation with […]
Weaknesses at large financial institutions have often played a central role in the triggering and propagation of systemic financial crises. The 2007-09 financial crisis was only the most recent example. Since the crisis, authorities worldwide have sought ways to strengthen regulation and supervision of these institutions, including through efforts at the international level led by […]
On 19 July 2011, the FSB published its consultative document on Effective Resolution of SIFIs. Feedback received from 59 entities on the document are published here.
This consultative document contains a comprehensive package of proposed policy measures to improve the capacity of authorities to resolve SIFIs. Comments should be sent to [email protected] by 2 September 2011.
This report updates on progress by the FSB Secretariat and IMF staff in implementing the 20 recommendations in the November 2009 report endorsed by the G20.