This guidance, which is mainly for internal use, will also benefit competent authorities and other relevant stakeholders as it will allow them to follow a consistent approach in their risk assessments.
The primary purpose of this Guide is to serve the EBA compilers of risk indicators and internal users, presenting the risk indicators and the DRATs, and thus providing guidance on their concepts, data sources (i.e. precise ITS data points involved in their calculation), techniques upon which they are computed, and clarity on methodological issues that may assist in their accurate interpretation and use.
Furthermore, this Guide fosters transparency on the computation methodology, with regard to those indicators used in the context of the EBA official publications, such as the EBA’s risk assessment report and the EBA Risk Dashboard. Most importantly, it informs the general public on how these indicators are computed.
Last but not least, this Guide enables other competent authorities to compute indicators following the same methodology, and thus compare, in a consistent manner, indicators for different samples of banks, as well as for the EU aggregates.
However, it has to be noted that this Guide is not intended to bind competent authorities and hence, it is not mandatory, but only aims at supporting computation of indicators, consistent with the EBA publications.
The Guide is a living document and, therefore, it may evolve periodically, reflecting new experiences and user needs or changes in EU supervisory reporting (i.e. ITS on supervisory reporting).
The Guide is structured in two parts. Part I presents the risk indicators by means of an introduction, along with a description of each of them, and concludes with a short reference to relevant methodological concerns, when those arise. Consequently, each risk indicator has been allocated either to one of the following eight categories, depending on the type of risk addressed (namely: liquidity, funding, asset quality, profitability, concentration, solvency, operational and market risk) or to the dedicated category for SME monitoring. Each of these categories has a dedicated chapter in Part I, while the Annex I, illustrates the risk indicators’ ID, name, formula (mathematical equation), computation frequency, range of their potential values, and their use and the phenomenon they intend to measure. Annex II provides the calculations and graphical representations (matrices) of the DRATs.
Finally, Part II discusses selective methodological issues that may arise when compiling or using the risk indicators and DRATs.
Full guide
Revised list of EBA_Risk Indicators and DRATs
© EBA
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