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The report provides guidance to financial market infrastructures (FMIs) such as CCPs on how to develop plans to enable them to recover from threats to their viability and financial strength that might prevent them from continuing to provide critical services to their participants and the markets they serve. It also provides guidance to relevant authorities in carrying out their responsibilities associated with the development and implementation of recovery plans and tools.
The report has been produced in response to comments received on the July 2012 CPSS-IOSCO report on recovery and resolution of financial market infrastructures that requested more guidance on what recovery tools would be appropriate for FMIs.
The report supplements the CPSS-IOSCO principles for financial market infrastructures (PFMI), the international standards for financial market infrastructures published in April 2012. It provides guidance on how FMIs can observe the requirements in the PFMI that they have effective recovery plans.
This is a consultation and does not itself create additional standards for FMIs. The report is also consistent with the Financial Stability Board’s key attributes of effective resolution regimes for financial institutions, published in October 2011.
Financial market infrastructures, which include payments systems, securities settlement systems, central securities depositories, central counterparties and trade repositories, play an essential role in the global financial system. The disorderly failure of an FMI could lead to severe systemic disruption if it caused markets to cease to operate effectively.
Published with the report is a cover note that lists specific issues on which the committees seek comments during the public consultation period. Comments on the report are invited from all interested parties and should be sent by 11 October 2013.