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While remaining cautious when considering the introduction of new quantitative regulatory requirements on SFTs, ESMA recommends to:
SFTR will introduce transparency, improve risk monitoring
To make the report, ESMA cooperated with the European Banking Authority (EBA) and the European Systemic Risk Board (ESRB), and relied on various sources of information. At this stage granular supervisory data are lacking, which will only become available once the SFT-Regulation (SFTR) data reporting obligation begins in 2018.
The SFTR aims to increase the transparency of shadow banking activities. It will require both financial and non-financial market participants to report details of their SFTs to an approved EU trade repository. These details will include the composition of the collateral, whether the collateral is available for reuse or has been reused, the substitution of collateral at the end of the day and the haircuts applied.