All Financial Stability Board articles
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Article
Fed supervision head Randal Quarles to resign
Randal Quarles, vice chair for supervision at the Federal Reserve, submitted his resignation as a member of the board, effective at the end of December.
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Article
International banking regulator: Big Tech ‘may pose risks to financial stability’
Big technology firms like Amazon, Facebook, Twitter, and Google are a potential risk if they get more heavily involved in providing financial services, says the Financial Stability Board.
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Article
Report says more companies address climate change, struggle with disclosures
A task force on climate-related financial disclosures found “encouraging progress” in its latest report, though there’s still work to be done when considering financial risks.
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Article
Regulators globally still call for better audits
While encouraged by the trend in audit inspection results, global audit regulators report they are still seeing levels of audit deficiency that command continued focus on improvement.
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Article
FSB continues push for Legal Entity Identifiers
The United States is among the laggards when it comes to international identifying codes for financial entities.
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Blog
Quarles to head Financial Stability Board
Randal Quarles, a Federal Reserve governor and its vice chairman for supervision, has been appointed as the new chairman of the international Financial Stability Board.
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Article
Reporting on climate risks on the bottom line
The Financial Stability Board is pressuring companies to disclose in some way what their potential risk business impact from climate change risk might be, as this has become a growing concern for investors.
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Blog
IFRS Foundation names new director for trustee activities
The IFRS Foundation has appointed Richard Thorpe as its new director for trustee activities. He replaces David Loweth, who will step down from his full-time position to take up a part-time role looking at developments in corporate reporting and their relevance to IFRS standards.
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Blog
FSB: Banks Must Devote Billions More to Capital Cushions
The world’s largest banks would need to collectively add as much as $1.2 trillion to existing capital buffers due to a new rule issued on Monday by the Financial Stability Board. Its final Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity (TLAC) standard, applicable to designated global systemically important banks, is intended to assure that ...
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Article
OECD Updates Views on Governance
The OECD has received an earful about proposed revisions to its principles of corporate governance, guidelines it encourages countries to adopt much the way they already follow its principles for anti-corruption. Some say the revisions dwell too much on company-level reforms, and not enough at the country-level to allow flexible ...