About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

EBA Seeks to Reduce Reporting Costs for Financial Firms

Subscribe to our newsletter

The European Banking Authority (EBA) is exploring ways to streamline supervisory reporting requirements and reduce reporting costs for financial institutions, especially smaller ones, as part of its drive to create a more “proportionate” regulatory and supervisory framework.

Common supervisory reporting was first introduced in the EU back in 2013, and the EBA is mandated by Article 430(8) of the EU’s Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR) to measure the costs institutions incur when complying with the reporting requirements set out in its Implementing Technical Standards (ITS) on supervisory reporting. The bank is also required to assess whether these reporting costs are proportionate with regard to the benefits delivered for the purposes of prudential supervision and make recommendations on how to reduce the reporting cost at least for small and non-complex institutions.

To this end, the EBA this week has launched a new survey addressed to all European banks, calling for case studies to collect evidence on reporting costs as well as industry views on ways to reduce such costs and make the supervisory reporting more efficient.

The findings from this analysis should be formulated in a report and delivered to the European Commission and European Parliament in 2021. The cost of compliance study will focuses first, on understanding the actual reporting costs incurred by institutions in relation to supervisory reporting, and in particular in relation to the EBA ITS; second, on assessing the effects of a reduction of some specific reporting requirements on costs and supervisory effectiveness; and third, on assessing whether the reporting costs are proportionate with regard to the benefits delivered.

The deadline for questionnaire responses and case study submission is October 2020 – with responses to the qualitative questions expected by 1 October 2020, and responses to the quantitative questions as well as the submission of case studies are expected by 31 October 2020.

The final report, expected to be delivered to the European Commission and European Parliament in 2021, will contain recommendations on how to reduce reporting costs for the banking industry by looking at both technological improvements and reducing some reporting requirements.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Best practice approaches to data management for regulatory reporting

Effective regulatory reporting requires firms to manage vast amounts of data across multiple systems, regions, and regulatory jurisdictions. With increasing scrutiny from regulators and the rising complexity of financial instruments, the need for a streamlined and strategic approach to data management has never been greater. Financial institutions must ensure accuracy, consistency, and timeliness in their...

BLOG

Navigating the Regulatory Data Labyrinth: Foundations, Collaboration, and the Pursuit of Trust

Regulatory reporting remains a significant challenge for financial institutions, driven by ever-evolving requirements and the sheer volume and complexity of data involved. A recent webinar, hosted by A-Team Group and co-sponsored by Nice Actimize and Derivative Service Bureau, brought together industry experts to discuss best practices in data management for regulatory reporting, offering valuable insights...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in New York will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the North American capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

The Reference Data Utility Handbook

The potential of a reference data utility model has been discussed for many years, and while early implementations failed to gain traction, the model has now come of age as financial institutions look for new data management models that can solve the challenges of operational cost reduction, improved data quality and regulatory compliance. The multi-tenanted...