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16 April 2013

IOSCO(証券監督者国際機構)が金融指標の原則に関する市中協議報告書を公表。コメント期限は5月16日


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IOSCO published a consultation paper on Principles for Financial Benchmarks, which seeks public comments on a set of high-level principles for benchmarks used in global financial markets. The closing date for responses is 16 May, 2013.


Because of the wide diversity of benchmarks, IOSCO also is asking for public comment on a subset of more detailed principles for benchmarks having specific risks arising from their reliance on submissions and/or their ownership structure.

The principles form part of IOSCO´s efforts to enhance the integrity, the reliability and the oversight of benchmarks by establishing guidelines for benchmark administrators and other relevant bodies on governance, benchmark quality, quality of the methodology, and accountability mechanisms.

The IOSCO Board created a Task Force in September 2012 to develop these principles in light of investigations and enforcement actions regarding attempted manipulation of major interest rate benchmarks. Those investigations and enforcement actions raised concerns over the fragility of certain benchmarks, caused by vulnerabilities in their methodology, transparency and governance arrangements.

The Board-level Task Force is chaired by Martin Wheatley, the chief executive of the UK Financial Conduct Authority (UK FCA), and Gary Gensler, the chairman of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

Mr Wheatley said: “The Principles proposed today extend the existing work conducted on Libor and other reference rates to a wider set of benchmarks. This is a key step in strengthening confidence and integrity of financial markets. I am pleased that IOSCO has been at the forefront of developing robust, international standards to improve the governance, transparency and quality of benchmarks.”

Mr Gensler said: “To promote market integrity, it is critical that benchmark interest rates be anchored in observable transactions and supported by appropriate governance structures. Given what the world has learned about Libor, Euribor and similar rates, I am pleased that the IOSCO proposed principles include both of these essential elements. I want to thank the IOSCO members and my co-chair Martin Wheatley for all of their dedication and efforts in developing these principles.”

The closing date for responses is 16 May, 2013.

Media release

Consultation report



© IOSCO


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