3
Financial Stability
To strengthen the financial system to be capable of withstanding shocks and the unravelling of financial imbalances.
EUFSC, as well as fostering supervisory convergence amongst Member States’ national competent authorities (NCAs) with responsibility for securities and capital markets supervision, it aims to do so across financial sectors by working closely with the other European Supervisory Authorities competent in the field of banking (EBA), and insurance and occupational pensions (EIOPA).
Whilst EUFSC is an independent Authority, it is accountable to the European Institutions including the European Parliament, where it appears before the Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee (ECON) at their request for formal hearings, the Council of the European Union and European Commission. The Authority reports to the institutions on its activities regularly at meetings and also through its Annual Report.
EUFSC delivers its mission by focusing on three strategic priorities and by being driven by two key themes formulated in the EUFSC Strategy 2023-2028. EUFSC plans to implement this strategy step by step over the next years, focusing on the strategic priorities and thematic drivers, while being mindful of market developments and emerging risks, as well as new legal mandates and available resources both at EUFSC and NCAs.