| Rules
and guidance
This section will provide information on legal and regulatory texts, including:
1.
Laws and regulations adopted by each Member State to implement the Basel II provisions of the Directives
2006/48/EC and 2006/49/EC. These texts outline the basic legislative
and regulatory framework for supervised credit institutions and
investment firms.
2.
Administrative rules. The term "administrative rules" is used in a variety of ways in different contexts. For the purposes of supervisory disclosure
it refers to documents that instruct supervised entities on how to satisfy legislative and regulatory requirements.
3.
General guidance. This includes explicit disclosure
requirements from the Directive 2006/48/EC, and explanations
deemed necessary to set out how the rules should be applied by institutions.
General guidance also includes any other relevant information
that competent authorities may choose to release in order to improve the understanding
of the new capital adequacy framework.
Options
and national discretions:
The
2006/48/EC and 2006/49/EC Directives contain a large number
of options and national discretions which may be applied on the
basis of national circumstances. This section is intended to make it easy for end-users to make quick and meaningful comparisons of how these options and national discretions are exercised in different Member States.
Supervisory
review:
This section will cover the general criteria and methodologies used by national authorities in the Supervisory Review
and Evaluation Process (SREP), the minimum requirements for the Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP) conducted by the institutions themselves, and the policies that guide national authorities in taking
supervisory measures with respect to specific institutions.
Statistical
data:
This section will display aggregate statistical data on key aspects of the implementation
of prudential framework in each Member State. The disclosures will include
national statistical data on the banking sector, credit risk, operational
risk, market risk, and supervisory actions and measures.
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