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Public hearing on the draft EBA methodology for setting fines under Article 131 of MICA
Thursday 16 July 2026, 14:30 - 16:00 CET
Virtual event
Public hearing on EBA Discussion Paper on certain key performance indicators (KPIs) and other aspects of the Disclosures Delegated Act under Article 8 of the Taxonomy Regulation
Thursday 16 July 2026, 13:30 - 15:00 CET
Virtual event
Crypto assets markets data II
Board of Supervisors meeting
Public hearing on the discussion paper on Pillar 3 data hub for small banks
Public hearing on the discussion paper on Pillar 3 data hub for small banks
Wednesday 1 July 2026, 15:00 - 16:30 CET
Virtual event
The European Banking Authority consults on a draft methodology for setting fines under the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA)
The European Banking Authority (EBA) published today a Consultation Paper with a draft methodology for setting fines in its role as supervisor under MiCA. The objective is to ensure that fines imposed on issuers of significant crypto-assets are consistent, proportionate and transparent, and effectively support compliance with the regulatory framework.
Methodology for setting fines under MiCA
Consultation on methodology for setting fines under MiCA
Final Report on revised SREP and supervisory stress testing Guidelines
List of legal acts facilitating SREP assessments
Consultation Paper on methodology for setting fines under MiCA
Validation rules 10-06-2026 (from to 4.0)
Validation rules 10-06-2026 (up to 3.5)
Micro_taxonomy_package
DPM VR updates scripts
The EBA updates validation rules for supervisory reporting
The European Banking Authority (EBA) today published an updated list of validation rules defined in its reporting frameworks, as part of its regular quarterly review process. The revised package identifies rules that have (i) been deactivated due to inaccuracies or IT-related issues, (ii) been reactivated, or (iii) undergone a change in severity status.
The EBA reaches another important milestone in enhancing supervisory efficiency with its revised SREP Guidelines
The European Banking Authority (EBA) today published its final revised Guidelines on common procedures and methodologies for the supervisory review and evaluation process (SREP) and supervisory stress testing, marking another key milestone in its efforts to enhance the efficiency, coherence and effectiveness of EU banking supervision. The revised Guidelines are a core deliverable of the EBA’s efficiency and simplification agenda. They build on the EBA Report on the efficiency of the regulatory and supervisory framework (October 2025) and follow the Report on simplifying the stacking orders of the EU prudential and resolution framework. The revised SREP Guidelines pave the way for a more risk-focused, efficient, proportionate and forward-looking framework for supervisors across the EU.