Search
Sort by
Content Types
Policy Areas
File types
Published After
Published Before
Results 1 - 9 of 9
FSB Plenary meets in Zurich, Switzerland
At its meeting today, the FSB reviewed and approved a number of policy proposals to be submitted to the G20 Summit in November, including on a package of measures to address the “too big to fail” problem.
FSB Chair’s letter to G20 Leaders - Building a resilient and open global financial system to support sustainable cross-border investment
FSB Chair’s letter to G20 Leaders in advance of their meeting in Hangzhou on 4-5 September.
Chair’s letter to the G20: Financial Reforms – Achieving and Sustaining Resilience for All
This letter from the FSB Chair to the G20 Leaders in advance of the Antalya Summit reports on progress on the FSB’s work and highlights issues that demand the attention of Leaders.
FSB reports to G20 Leaders on financial regulatory reforms
FSB report shows reforms are working and no major unintended consequences from the G20 financial regulatory reforms.
FSB Plenary meets in Basel
FSB members discussed vulnerabilities in the global financial system, reviewed issues affecting emerging market and developing economies and agreed the FSB’s work programme for 2022.
FSB report finds that effects of G20 financial reforms on infrastructure finance are of a second order relative to other factors
Report is part of FSB evaluation to examine the effects of G20 reforms on financial intermediation.
Meeting of the Financial Stability Board in Tokyo on 30-31 March
FSB Plenary meets to discuss emerging vulnerabilities, asset management and market liquidity risks, shadow banking, climate risks, fin tech, CCP resilience and macroprudential tools as well as issues of particular relevance to EMDEs.
FSB publishes report on implementation and effects of the G20 financial regulatory reforms
FSB Chair updates the G20 on the implementation and effects of financial regulatory reforms.
FSB consults on the effects of reforms on infrastructure finance
Evaluation finds no material negative effects from post-crisis reforms on the provision and cost of infrastructure finance.
Page 1 of 1