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View All Comment Letters and Position Papers

Pending Comment Letters

Your comments are extremely important to us to provide the best response by WOCCU to these regulatory proposals.

Listed below are all pending regulatory actions for which WOCCU intends to submit a Comment Letter. The listed date is the date by which Comments are due to the respective agency.  All Comment Letters filed by WOCCU can be viewed on the Comments & Position Papers tab. Comments filed by the European Network of Credit Unions can be found here.

Please be sure to provide us with your comments in advance of the Due Date so that we may include them in our Comment Letter.


Agency Pending Comment Letters Due Date
Basel Committee Recalibration of Shocks for Interest Rate Risk in the Banking Book March 28, 2024
 

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FSB Publishes Report on Interaction Between USD Funding and External Vulnerabilities in EMEs

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Financial Stability Board

On April 26, 2022, the Financial Stability Board released a report, US Dollar Funding and Emerging Market Economy Vulnerabilities (EMEs), outlining its findings of work in collaboration with the IMF on the interaction between US dollar funding and external vulnerabilities in emerging market economies. The collaboration with the IMF is part of the FSB’s work programme on non-bank financial intermediation, intended to enhance the resilience of non-bank financial intermediation (NBFI).

The report discusses EME vulnerabilities stemming from foreign currency borrowing, and necessary policy measures to address those vulnerabilities supported by analysis of EME capital flows during March 2020, with an emphasis on the non-bank investor roles. These measures include a concentration on the “build-up of foreign exchange mismatches"; enhancing crisis management tools; and addressing data gaps to "facilitate risk monitoring and the timely adoption of policies.” Generally, the report highlights EME vulnerabilities derived from external funding and non-bank financing, while illuminating the policy work that both the FSB and the IMF must do in their respective countries and internationally to increase EMEs resilience to “future shocks”.

More information on the report and EME vulnerabilities is available here and here.



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