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Brussels, 23 May 2023 – Together with other associations, the EBF has co-signed a statement addressing concerns on Chapter V of the Data Act which covers access to data by public bodies. The statement encourages EU policymakers to take the necessary time to build a clear and proportionate framework that does not allow unrestricted access to any data on vague grounds but will on the contrary protect fundamental rights and the rule of law. The statement recommends that:
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
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BRUSSELS, 22 April 2022 – The EBF has recently responded to the European Banking Authority’s Discussion Paper on its preliminary observations on selected payment fraud data under the Payment Services Directive.
The EBF’s response highlights that the data collected by the EBA reflects a low level of incidence of frauds, showing that the safety measures taken by European Payment Service Providers are adequate. Nonetheless, authorities should be cautious to use the EBA data as a basis for policy measures, as the current data is based on a sample of countries only. We believe that the introduction of Strong Customer Authentication has brought many benefits to the security of the sector and of the clients and proved to be an appropriate measure. However, as new fraud patterns (such as social engineering) are being recorded, the EBF suggests that the new fraud techniques be explored in detail and a regulatory link be made with cybersecurity acts and incident/security guidelines. Finally, the EBF believes that a greater harmonisation among countries is highly desirable to prevent frauds from arising through regulatory arbitrage.
For more information:
Anni Mykkänen, Senior Policy Adviser – Innovation & Payments, a.mykkanen@ebf.eu
Beatrice Mora, Innovation & Payments team, b.mora@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
The post EBF response to European Banking Authority’s Discussion Paper on its preliminary observations on selected payment fraud data under the Payment Services Directive appeared first on EBF.
]]>The European Banking Federation updated its position paper on cyber incident reporting by including a new annex describing the Danish Joint Solution for reports on IT Security Events (FLIIS), a successful example of centralised reporting scheme.
The establishment of a centralised hub, aimed at collecting from financial institutions all reports covering incidents and submitting them to the competent authorities, should be considered as the preferred model for reporting of cyber incidents. By fulfilling the above functions, the centralised hub would not only channel and coordinate the submission of reports more quickly and efficiently but also indirectly facilitate the monitoring of cyber risks and trends at the national level.
This document aims to address the fragmentation of the EU cyber incident reporting framework, resulting from the existence of several different Incident Reporting Requirements across Europe, and to make proposals for regulators and policymakers for fostering information sharing and cooperation between Financial Institutions and Supervisory Authorities.
Depending on the type of incident, the reporting entity and the different legislations that apply, the current regulatory framework for incident reporting is characterised by:
• Different taxonomies;
• Different timelines, thresholds, information requirements and multiple templates for reporting;
• Various actors involved, from both the sender and receiver sides;
• Insufficient clarity in existing communication channels between public bodies and authorities (e.g. Europol, national law enforcement, national financial regulatory bodies, national CERTs).
These elements create additional regulatory and operational burdens that financial institutions have to abide by during or immediately after having suffered a cyber incident1. They also prevent the creation of more centralised and uniform mechanisms that can speed up the reporting process and enable a smoother exchange of information and good practices. Due to the complex rules and reporting channels, existing different requirements result in coordination and compliance challenges.
In order to ensure that financial institutions are able to quickly and effectively report cyber incidents without at the same time sacrificing proper incident management and recovery process, and very much in line with the ESAs Joint Advice on legislative improvements, the European Banking Federation (EBF) makes the following proposals for supervisors and regulators:
• Establish a central reporting and coordination hub in each Member State;
• Harmonise reporting thresholds and create a common taxonomy for cybersecurity incidents;
• Foster public-private real-time collaboration between regulators, supervisors, law enforcement, financial institutions and other cross-sectoral infrastructure actors;
• Further involve national CERTs in information sharing;
• Introduce a regular bi-directional information flow between regulators/ supervisors and the industry.
Alexandra Maniati
Head of Cybersecurity & Innovation
a.maniati@ebf.eu
+32 25083736
Sergio Tringali
Policy Adviser
s.tringali@ebf.eu
+32 25083724
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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]]>The EBF welcomes the initiative of the European Commission to bring forward legislative proposals for fostering the digital operational resilience framework for financial services with a view to harmonise rules across the EU. The interconnectedness of all actors within the financial ecosystem, incl. third party providers, and the evolution of ICT risks highlight the need for a common level of minimum security for the financial sector as a whole, based on international coordination.
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CONTACT:
Alexandra Maniati, Director, Cybersecurity & Innovation, a.maniati@ebf.eu
Iliana Koutoulakou, Policy Adviser Compliance, Tax & Security, i.koutoulakou@ebf.eu
Media:
Nahuel Mercedes, Communications Officer, n.mercedes@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The post Digital Operational Resilience Framework: EBF key messages on the Commission consultation appeared first on EBF.
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BRUSSELS, 1 February 2022 – The EBF, together with a number of EU payment sector associations, has written to the European Data Protection Board, the European Commission and the European Banking Authority regarding the EDPB Guidelines on the Interaction between PSD2 and GDPR. The letter highlights that while the payments sector remains fully committed to ensuring the protection of EU citizen’s data- including within the framework of PSD2 – there are concerns that the enforcement of the Guidelines will lead to an outcome that is not in line with PSD2 objectives, therefore hindering innovation and competition in payments.
While the final Guidelines help in clarifying certain aspects of the interplay,
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Contacts:
Liga Semane, Policy Adviser, Innovation & Data, l.semane@ebf.eu
Anni Mykkanen, Senior Adviser, Payments & Innovation, a.mykkanen@ebf.eu
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About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
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Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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Brussels, 26 November 2021 – The EBF has responded to the European Banking Authority’s Consultation on amending RTS on SCA and CSC under PSD2 (EBA/CP/2021/32).
The EBF acknowledges that the issue of 90-days SCA renewal has widely been raised by AISPs as a particularly problematic aspect of PSD2 implementation and the need of the EBA to explore possible solutions. However, as it is important to balance different market views, we are of the view that a mandatory exemption is not appropriate. The exemption should remain voluntary in order to allow ASPSPs to address any potential increase in risk of fraud as per bank risk appetite, whilst also ensuring flexible legislation that does not stifle innovation and cause unnecessary friction in the customer experience.
Concerning the proposed 6-month implementation timeline, the EBF retains that the implementation period needs to consider that most of the implementation burden is on the ASPSP side. For implementing the mandatory exemption for the case when the information is accessed through an AISP a longer implementation period of one year would be needed. For a solution consisting only of an extension to 180 days for renewing SCA, 6-months after publication in the official journal could be enough.
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ABOUT THE EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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BRUSSELS, 18 OCTOBER – The EBF has responded to the EBA Consultation on draft Guidelines on the limited network exclusion under PSD2.
Our response highlights that a transparent and clear application of the exemptions is relevant from a consumer protection perspective. When paying with a card that is issued under the limited network exclusions, consumers cannot benefit from those consumer protection rules that apply under PSD2. Also, a harmonised interpretation is also vital in terms of competition reasons, since there is a large cost difference in offering a service exempt from PSD2 compared to services in the scope. A more harmonised application of the exemptions would support a more level playing field.
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MEDIA CONTACT:
Anni Mykkanen, Senior Adviser, Payments & Innovation a.mykkanen@ebf.eu
ABOUT THE EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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]]>BRUSSELS, 2 September 2021 – The European Credit Sector Associations (ECSAs), submitted joint feedback on 30 August to the European Commission’s initiative for an EU digital ID scheme for online transactions across the Member States.
The ECSAs include the European Banking Federation (EBF), the European Savings and Retail Banking Group (ESBG) and the European Association of Co-operative Banks (EACB).
The organisations welcome the Commission’s proposal, announced on 3 June, for a regulation establishing a framework for a European Digital Identity, as well as the high ambitions outlined in the initiative, which represent a positive development in the creation of a future-proof EU single digital market.
A European digital identity will make it possible to offer faster onboarding processes and improve customers’ user experience while ensuring the same level of security as face-to-face onboarding. The ECSAs believe that the proposal will ultimately contribute to facilitating the adoption of digital banking services.
The Commission proposal aims to provide an ecosystem of credentials leveraging a new wallet architecture of several ID solutions, which holds the potential to further increase innovation for the benefit of all European businesses and citizens. The proposed decentralised model fosters personal autonomy and increased personal data protection, giving users control over their identity attributes.
The ECSAs believe the proposal will incentivise the Member States to be more expedient in developing e-ID solutions with a wide scope of usage and potentially much higher adoption rates. It also provides grounds for some attributes to be validated against public sources. This is a welcome development, particularly in processes where a high level of assurance of these attributes is necessary, for example, the KYC process. When acting as relying parties, banks should be aware of the chain of trust in data sharing (including actors involved) and should be able to promptly check the validity of credentials.
Call for banking sector’s involvement in the Toolbox
The ECSAs appreciate the cooperation between the European Institutions, Member States and the private sector. Member States should cooperate in a coordinated manner towards a Common Toolbox. The European digital identity should build on existing (and upcoming) national notified e-ID solutions. The ECSAs believe that the banking sector should also be involved in the development of the Toolbox. Banks can be key partners in drafting a roadmap that ensures successful e-ID adoption given the wide scope of use cases and related implementation costs.
It will be key to establish a common technical architecture that enables the private sector to integrate any digital wallet developed within this regulatory framework without additional technical burden, regardless of where it is issued.
The ECSAs look forward to a Toolbox that is a common, openly available standard that enables the development of multiple, interoperable e-ID solutions and which incentivises private sector schemes to participate.
About the ECSAs e-ID Task Force
The ECSAs e-ID Task Force brings together experts from 36 financial institutions and national banking associations with the goal of expressing a common position for the whole sector on Digital Identity. The Task Force stands ready to further engage on the strategic issue of digital identity with the Commission, the EU co-legislators and a wide range of stakeholders both at European and national level.
Contacts:
Eduard Hovsepyan, Policy Adviser, Anti-Money Laundering, e.hovsepyan@ebf.eu
About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, bringing together national banking associations from across Europe. The EBF is committed to a thriving European economy that is underpinned by a stable, secure and inclusive financial ecosystem, and to a flourishing society where financing is available to fund the dreams of citizens, businesses and innovators everywhere. Website: www.ebf.eu Twitter: @EBFeu.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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MALTA, 5 May 2017 — European banks, through the Board of the European Banking Federation, today reaffirmed their commitment to supporting the European project through actively and responsibly financing businesses and households. The Board welcomed continued evidence of easing bank credit standards and increasing loan activity in the euro area, as demonstrated again in the first quarter by the quarterly Bank Lending Survey of the European Central Bank.
Given the particular significance of bank finance for Europe’s economy the EBF Board called on national and European policymakers for proper calibration when it comes to the finalisation of the wide range of regulatory measures still currently under discussion in the European Union. This is necessary so that banks can continue their financing commitment and support growth and jobs.
“We need to make sure that the international competitiveness of the European banking sector is not damaged. It is up to policymakers now to finalise the regulatory agenda and strike the right balance, avoiding undue impact on the financing of households and companies while ensuring the development of a safe, sustainable and competitive European financial services industry that benefits all our economies.”
Customers expect banks to protect their personal data. Data protection is at the core of trust in financial institutions. While European banks fully embrace innovation in their services and value competition in the market, the Board of the EBF warns that an inappropriate changes of proposed technical standards for electronic payments would put at risk the integrity of customer data, jeopardises the level playing field in European payment services and places a disproportionate burden on banks in the implementation of unnecessary technical solutions.
The Board calls on the European Commission to adopt – without amendments – the delegated act proposed by the European Banking Authority (EBA) for electronic payment services under the second European Payment Services Directive, known as PSD2. Deviating from the EBA recommendations would clearly go against the objectives of enhancing consumer protection and improving security of payment services across the European Union.
Through the Board of the EBF European banks reaffirm their commitment to serving Europe’s economy and to working with households and businesses – including SMEs – on their finances.
National and European policymakers need to recognise that banks are held back from fully delivering on this commitment as long as they continue to face regulatory uncertainty.
Particular sources of concern for banks are the leverage ratio; the implementation of the minimum requirement for own funds and eligible liabilities (MREL); the Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR); and the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB). Financing of the European economy can be substantially impacted if these are not carefully and proportionally calibrated.
The Board calls on EU policymakers to agree the EU Risk Reduction Package in a way that respects the balance between economic growth and financial regulation. European banks generally see the package as an opportunity to make regulation more proportionate, less burdensome and more manageable.
However certain elements of the package, in particular those regarding capital requirements, overlap with measures currently under discussion at the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. The Board calls on policymakers to put on hold EU decisions on these measures until international decisions on the Basel IV framework have been finalised.
Addressing the global discussions in the Basel Committee, the Board of the EBF continues to fear that Basel IV could have significant negative consequences for bank financing in Europe if it is adopted with ill-calibrated parameters, in particular an output floor. The EBF Board strongly believes that European policymakers should only support an agreement on international standard if it is not detrimental to the banks’ capacity to finance businesses and households and hence does not jeopardise European growth perspectives.
Furthermore the Board calls on European policymakers to fully take into account the specificities of EU bank finance as opposed to the structure of financing in the United States, particularly regarding mortgages and corporates.
While the Board recognised the significant progress being made by the Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM) it noted the implementation of the full range of measures included in the SRM requires careful assessment of the potential impact and unintended effects on the EU economy. The Board highlighted the importance of building a constructive dialogue between the industry and the Single Resolution Board at a critical moment in its development.
Beyond the most urgent topics on the regulatory agenda, the Board also discussed longer-term topics such as the upcoming negotiations between the EU and the United Kingdom on its EU membership and the pending discussions on future cooperation between the EU27 countries and the UK. With regards to the EU plans for creating a Capital Markets Union, the Board unanimously agrees that the European Commission needs to develop a more ambitious approach, capital market financing being needed going forward to finance the economy as a complement to bank financing.
While in Malta the European Banking Federation and the Malta Bankers’ Association organised a joint conference on key issues affecting smaller European banks.
Hosted at the Malta Financial Services Authority the conference addressed the need for proportionality in regulation; digitalisation; and unintended constraints to correspondent banking, with the participation of the European Banking Authority, the European Commission and the European Central Bank. Prof. Edward Scicluna, Finance Minister of Malta, which currently holds the presidency of the EU, closed the conference with a reflection on the need to fine-tune EU regulation for banks.
Raymond Frenken, Head of Communications, +32 496 52 59 47, r.frenken@ebf.eu
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, uniting 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent some 4,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – employing about 2.1 million people. EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that securely handle more than 300 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to creating a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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]]>BRUSSELS, 11 July 2017 – The European Parliament today hosted a breakfast meeting with representatives of consumer groups, financial technology firms, IT experts, banks and banking associations on the interaction between banks and third-party providers (TPPs) under the second EU Payment Services Directive (PSD2). Hosted by MEP Neena Gill (S&D, UK), the breakfast heard from representatives of the European Banking Federation, MoneyHub, UKFinance, the Berlin Group, BEUC, the European consumer organisation, the European Commission and the European Association of Cooperative Banks.
Interesting points by @davidgtonge CTO @moneyhubapp on the importance of having a common interface’s to encourage innovation #EBF #psd2 pic.twitter.com/srgaWfoteE
— Neena Gill MEP (@NeenaGmep) July 11, 2017
Hosting #EBF ‘Traditional banks have no divine right to handle payments. #Fintech sector can help innovate best products for consumer’ #PSD2 pic.twitter.com/dTq3pDgwDO
— Neena Gill MEP (@NeenaGmep) July 11, 2017
The EBF presented the following video to explain the importance of APIs, or Application Programming Interfaces, when it comes to future interaction of clients with their bank accounts.
Thx @NeenaGmep for hosting PSD2 WS. Imp. to understand what is @stake! APIs will open competition in safer & reliable way!Notscreenscraping
— de Brouwer S (@deBrouwerEBF) July 11, 2017
Valuable insights shared on #fintech #PSD2 #Openbanking #payments and fin. innovation at @Europarl_EN breakfast kindly hosted by @NeenaGmep pic.twitter.com/MaGBG9MQ8m
— EBF 🇪🇺 (@EBFeu) July 11, 2017
UK #fintech community united in approach to #openbanking via APIs, David Tong @MoneyHubUK tells PSD2 breakfast w/ @NeenaGmep in Brussels pic.twitter.com/zCPydrrAZS
— Raymond Frenken (@FrenkenEBF) July 11, 2017
Monique Gooyens presented the position of Beuc, the European consumer organisation, speaking out clearly against the use of screen-scraping:
#beuc is opposed to #screenscraping for #data #protection and #security reasons. Support #eba_News standard and strong #APIs pic.twitter.com/Q5xt7Gn4L0
— Elisa BevilacquaEACB (@bevilacquaeacb) July 11, 2017
The battle between #FinTechs and banks on consumer data is heating up – here’s what we think needs to happen https://t.co/lTU389yCqG pic.twitter.com/UNi8Kb4l6P
— The Consumer Voice (@beuc) July 6, 2017
EBF, EACB and the European Savings Banks Group (ESBG) presented a jointly held position on efficient and future-proof interaction between banks and third-parties under PSD2. Click here for the position document.
Related:
EBF media contact:
Raymond Frenken, Head of Communications, +32 496 52 59 47, r.frenken@ebf.eu
About the EBF:
The European Banking Federation is the voice of the European banking sector, uniting 32 national banking associations in Europe that together represent some 4,500 banks – large and small, wholesale and retail, local and international – employing about 2.1 million people.EBF members represent banks that make available loans to the European economy in excess of €20 trillion and that securely handle more than 400 million payment transactions per day. Launched in 1960, the EBF is committed to creating a single market for financial services in the European Union and to supporting policies that foster economic growth.
Every Friday at noon you can receive the EBF Weekly + Financial Regulation Agenda. This agenda presents an overview of upcoming European and international meetings and conferences in financial regulation, as well as important general financial and economic events and key EBF meetings for the week ahead. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
The EBF Morning Brief is published Monday through Friday morning and brings you the top banking headlines, relevant announcements from the EU institutions and the latest from the EBF and its members, national banking associations in 32 countries in Europe. CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE
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