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The stress test is designed to provide supervisors, banks and other market participants with a common analytical framework to consistently compare and assess the resilience of EU banks to economic shocks. For the first time, it incorporates IFRS 9 accounting standards. No pass-fail threshold has been included as the results of the exercise are designed to serve as an input to the Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP).
The EBA's 2018 stress test methodology was published in November 2017 and is to be applied to the scenarios released.
The baseline scenario is in line with the December forecast published by the European Central Bank (ECB), while the adverse scenario assumes the materialisation of four systemic risks, which are currently deemed as representing the most material threats to the stability of the EU banking sector:
The adverse scenario is designed to ensure an adequate level of severity across all EU countries. The implied EU real GDP growth rates under the adverse scenario amount to -1.2%, -2.2% and +0.7%, in 2018, 2019 and 2020 respectively. Overall, the scenario implies a deviation of EU GDP from its baseline level by 8.3% in 2020, resulting in the most severe scenario in terms of GDP deviation from baseline levels compared with the previous EBA exercises.
Detailed information about the scenario can be found in the note produced by the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB).
2018 EU-wide stress test - Methodological Note
2018 EU-wide Stress Test Market Risk Scenario
2018 EU-wide Stress Test-Templates
Adverse macroeconomic scenario for the EBA 2018 Stress Test
ESRB Letter on 2018 EU-wide Stress Test Adverse Macroeconomic Scenario
FAQs on 2018 EU-wide stress test