1 / 19

Handbook on Securities Statistics Overview of a joint BIS-ECB-IMF initiative

Handbook on Securities Statistics Overview of a joint BIS-ECB-IMF initiative. Overview. The 20 recommendations under the G-20 data gaps initiative The Handbook on Securities Statistics Part 1 of the Handbook - Debt securities issues Part 2 of the Handbook - Debt securities holdings

pooky
Download Presentation

Handbook on Securities Statistics Overview of a joint BIS-ECB-IMF initiative

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Handbook on Securities Statistics Overview of a joint BIS-ECB-IMF initiative

  2. Overview • The 20 recommendations under the G-20 data gaps initiative • The Handbook on Securities Statistics • Part 1 of the Handbook - Debt securities issues • Part 2 of the Handbook - Debt securities holdings • Implementation of Part 1 and Part 2 of the Handbook • Part 3 of the Handbook - Equity securities • The Handbook on the web

  3. The G-20 data gaps initiative • Data gaps • As an inevitable consequence of the ongoing development of markets and institutions • Are highlighted when a lack of timely, accurate information hinders the ability of policy makers and market participants to develop effective responses • Recent crisis has reaffirmed an old lesson – good data and good analysis are the essentials of effective surveillance and policy responses at both the national and international levels • April 2009: G-20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors Working Group on Reinforcing International Co-operation and Promoting Integrity in Financial Markets called on the IMF and the FSB to explore information gaps and to providedappropriate proposals • Following widespread consultation, a broad consensus over information gaps • 20 recommendations

  4. The G-20 data gaps initiative • Inter-Agency Group on Economic and Financial Statistics (IAG) • Has worked together to start closing some data gaps • Has prepared, together with the FSB, G-20 Progress Reports on the G-20 data gaps initiative (G-20 meetings in St Andrews on 7 November 2009 and in Busan on 4 and 5 June 2010) and two senior officials meeting organised by the IMF and the FSB (Washington, 8-9 July 2009 and Basel, 8-9 April 2010) • Recommendation 7 on data gaps states: • “Central banks and, where relevant, statistical offices, particularly those of the G-20 economies, to participate in the BIS data collection on securities and contribute to the further development of the BIS-ECB-IMF Handbookon Securities Statistics (Handbook). The Working Group on Securities Databases (WGSD) to develop and implement a communication strategy for the Handbook.” • Other recommendations on PGI website, Financial Soundness Indicators, IIP, GFS, CDS, public sector debt, real estate prices, etc.

  5. The Handbook on Securities Statistics • Background • June 2007: recommendations in CGFS report • October 2007: recommendations in G8 report • November 2007: reconvened IMF Working Group on Securities Database (WGSD) • March 2008 in Washington: Irving Fisher Committee (IFC) workshop “Challenges to improve global comparison of securities statistics” (see IFC Publication on …) • Upon general demand, BIS-ECB-IMF took joint initiative to develop a Handbook on Securities Statistics (HSS) • Initially to cover debt securities issues (Part 1) and holdings (Part 2) • Published in May 2009 and in September 2010 • Decision has been taken to add Part 3 on non-debt securities • Including equity securities

  6. The Handbook on Securities Statistics • Objectives • Improve information on securities markets • Develop a conceptual framework for presentation of statistics on different types of securities issued and held • Consistency with existing international statistical standards

  7. Structure of the Part I of the HSS Part I of the Handbook - Debt securities issues Objectives, scope and consistency • Structure • Section 1: Introduction • Section 2: Main features of debt securities • Section 3: Institutional units and sectors • Section 4: Securitisation • Section 5: Accounting rules, valuation, and recording of accrued interest • Section 6: Classification of debt securities • Section 7: Detailed presentation tables • Section 8: Metadata • Annexes: structured debt securities; Islamic debt securities; market value and nominal value; security-by-security databases; example of metadata for debt securities statistics

  8. Content of the Part I of the HSS Part I of the Handbook - Debt securities issues • Content • Follows international statistical standards such as 2008 SNA or BPM6 • Goes beyond these standards by • Presenting refinements in • Developing more detailed financial instrument classifications (by currency, maturity, interest rate, default risk, etc.) • Looking at securitisation operations and units involved in securitisation • Delineation of three types of securitisation • Dealing with borderline cases such as structured debt securities • Having an annex on Islamic debt securities • Describing security-by-security databases • Looking at examples of metadata • Developing detailed presentation tables

  9. Stylised presentation table Data with breakdowns by maturity and interest rate are not collected in the first step of the data collection; data with breakdowns by maturity and interest rate are covered in the second step of the data collection which will start in 2011 and will cover all markets only.

  10. Structure of the Part I of the HSS Part 2 of the Handbook - Debt securities holdings Objectives, scope and consistency • Published in September 2010 • Structure • Section 1: Introduction • Section 2: Main features of debt securities holdings • Section 3: Stocks, flows and valuation of debt securities holdings • Section 4: Specific operations related to debt securities holdings • Section 5: Debt securities holdings in a from-whom-to-whom framework • Section 6: Detailed presentation tables • Annexes: The Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey, security-by-security databases and security-by-security collection of holder information; groups of corporations as holders of debt securities

  11. Content of the Part I of the HSS Part 2 of the Handbook - Debt securities holdings • Content • Follows international statistical standards such as 2008 SNA or BPM6 • Goes beyond these standards by elaborating on additional issues • Presenting refinements in referring to holdings of debt securities • By money-issuing corporations, institutional investors or securitisation corporations • With breakdowns by type of interest rate • In the context of the IMF Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey (CPIS) • Uses two types of stylised presentation tables on debt securities holdings • Presentation table A based on the “residence of holder” approach • Presentation table B reflecting the “from-whom-to-whom” approach

  12. Content of the Part I of the HSS Part 2 of the Handbook - Debt securities holdings • Specific sections on • Debtor approach and creditor approach to recording accrued interest • Special operations (reverse transactions, short-selling, depository receipts, stripped securities, nominee accounts) • From-whom-to-whom framework • Transactor principle and debtor/creditor principle

  13. Content of the Part I of the HSS Part 2 of the Handbook - Debt securities holdings Presentation table A based on the “residence of holder” approach

  14. Content of the Part I of the HSS Part 2 of the Handbook - Debt securities holdings Presentation table B reflecting the “from-whom-to-whom” approach

  15. Content of the Part I of the HSS Part 2 of the Handbook - Debt securities holdings

  16. Content of the Part I of the HSS Part 2 of the Handbook - Debt securities holdings

  17. Content of the Part I of the HSS Implementation of Part 1 and Part 2 of the Handbook • BIS to coordinate transmitting data to its databank to fill presentation tables according to the Handbook • Around 40 non-euro central banks have nominated contacts • Major exercise for many central banks and BIS • Process longer than expected, not yet finalised • 17 central banks have already reported data (10 from G20 countries) • Presentation tables as described in Part 1 of the Handbook expected to be transmitted by end 2010 at the earliest • ECB to coordinate with EU central banks (Statistics Committee within the European System of Central Banks) • Implementation of ESA 2010 in 2014 (in line with the Handbook) • Use of the Centralised Securities Database (CSDB)

  18. Content of the Part I of the HSS Part 3 of the Handbook - Equity securities • Part 3 of the Handbook on issues and holdings of non-debt securities • Listed and unlisted shares • Investment fund shares or units • Will be coordinated by the ECB in 2011 • Publication foreseen in 2011

  19. Content of the Part I of the HSS Handbook on the web • Handbook on Securities Statistics (Part 1 and Part 2)available on the • IMF website: • http://www.imf.org/external/ns/search.aspx?NewQuery=Handbook+Securities+Statistics&col=&submit.x=37&submit.y=7 • ECB website: • http://www.ecb.int/stats/pdf/money/securities/wgsd/sec_handbook_bis-ecb-imf_pt2.pdf?502985fd3c4a2fd35f3be23d9c7db3f7

More Related