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19 July 2011

FSB launched consultation on measures to address systemically important financial institutions


The FSB's proposals include measures to remove obstacles to resolution arising from complex firm structures and business practices, fragmented information systems, intra-group transactions, reliance on service providers and the provision of global payment services.

The Financial Stability Board (FSB) and the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) are launching a public consultation on two documents that set out proposed measures to address the systemic and moral hazard risks posed by systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs). The measures implement the framework contained in the FSB’s recommendations endorsed by the G20 Leaders in November 2010.

The consultative document on Effective Resolution of Systemically Important Financial Institutions sets out a comprehensive package of proposed policy measures to improve the capacity of authorities to resolve failing SIFIs without systemic disruption and without exposing the taxpayer to the risk of loss. The proposed measures comprise four key building blocks:

• strengthened national resolution regimes that give a designated resolution authority a broad range of powers and tools, including statutory bail-in, to resolve a financial institution that is no longer viable;
• cross-border cooperation arrangements in the form of institution-specific cooperation agreements, underpinned by national law, that will enable resolution authorities to act collectively to resolve cross-border firms in a more orderly, less costly, way;
• improved resolution planning by firms and authorities based on ex ante resolvability assessments that should inform the preparation of Recovery and Resolution Plans.

To help inform its final resolution-related recommendations, the FSB is also releasing two discussion notes for comments. A note on 'Creditor hierarchy, depositor preference and depositor protection in resolution' seeks views on the impact on effective resolution of differences in the ranking of creditors’ claims, in particular in the treatment of deposit claims.

Another note on 'Conditions for imposing temporary stays' discusses the possible conditions under which a temporary suspension of contractual early termination rights should apply to support the implementation of certain resolution tools.

The second consultative document, 'Global Systemically Important Banks: Assessment Methodology and the Additional Loss Absorbency Requirement', sets out a methodology for assessing the global systemic importance of banks, the magnitude of added loss absorbency that globally systemic banks should have, and the proposed arrangements by which these requirements will be phased in. This document was prepared by the BCBS, in close cooperation with the FSB. A separate press release on this document has been issued by the Basel Committee.

The two consultation documents form part of the broader FSB policy framework for SIFIs which also includes more intensive and effective supervisory oversight and improvements in financial market infrastructures to reduce contagion risks. The FSB, in cooperation with the international standard-setting bodies, will carry out further work to address global systemically important insurers, domestic systemically important banks, other systemic financial firms and financial market infrastructure.

FSB chairman, Mario Draghi, noted that “many countries entered this crisis without a proper resolution regime. Where effective resolution tools existed, these did not address the cross border dimension or obstacles to resolution stemming from complex firm structures and business practices. This meant that proper market discipline was not in place in the years preceding the crisis and made the handling of the crisis more difficult.

The proposed resolution measures will address these shortcomings. Alongside the strengthening of the loss absorbency of globally systemic banks, these measures will create strong incentives for institutions to reduce their systemic importance and foster a safer and sounder financial system over time”.

Deadline for comments is 2 September 2011.

Press release


© Financial Stability Board


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