Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. The European Commission is set to delay the impact of a global banking reform as it seeks to stop EU lenders ...
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EU banks get breathing room as capital rule decisions face delays
The European Union (EU) is once again pushing back key decisions on bank capital requirements under the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB). Per a Financial Times report, policymakers are ...
EU to delay Basel III FRTB trading-book reforms, using a temporary multiplier to limit capital hits and keep banks competitive.
After years of debate and delay, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision’s Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB) rules are finally being rolled out, requiring banks around the world to ...
Some banks are struggling to aggregate market and reference data of sufficient quality to fit the models of the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book ahead of the proposed 2025 deadlines. The ...
Hong Kong, Singapore – Bloomberg has won Best FRTB Solution at the Regulation Asia Awards for Excellence 2024, which recognizes innovative practices that utilize advanced data, analytics and risk ...
US banks will very soon find out how serious regulators are about curbing a decline in the use of internal models for calculating capital requirements under revamped trading book rules.
The European Commission has adopted a Delegated Regulation amending the EU Capital Requirements Regulation with regard to the date of application of the own funds requirements for market risk. In ...
The European Commission has launched a critical consultation that could reshape how banks manage market risk across the continent. This targeted review focuses on the Fundamental Review of the Trading ...
BRUSSELS, March 18 (Reuters) - The European Union plans to "neutralise" the impact on lenders' capital requirements from a ...
“Buy the rumours, sell the facts” is normally a good trading strategy. It plays nicely to the human bias that the Roman senator Tacitus described as “omne ignotum pro magnifico est” or “everything ...
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