The European Securities and
Markets Authority (ESMA
ESMA
European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) is an independent Authority of the European Union that is responsible for the safety, security, and stability of the European Unions’ financial system and is charged with protecting the public. The European supervisory authority for the securities sector, ESMA was established on 1 January 2011. The European Securities and Markets Authority is an independent EU authority based in Paris. It aims to contribute to the effectiveness and stability of t
European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) is an independent Authority of the European Union that is responsible for the safety, security, and stability of the European Unions’ financial system and is charged with protecting the public. The European supervisory authority for the securities sector, ESMA was established on 1 January 2011. The European Securities and Markets Authority is an independent EU authority based in Paris. It aims to contribute to the effectiveness and stability of t
Read this Term) and its national enforcers in 2022 took enforcement
actions against 225 issuers whose securities are admitted for trading on
European regulated markets. The actions are based on their financial statements
drawn up in accordance with the International Financial Reporting Standards
(IFRS).
ESMA Highlights Biggest
Shortfall
The actions were mostly directed
at resolving shortcomings related to “accounting for financial instruments,
impairment of non-financial assets, presentation of financial statements and
revenue recognition.” Other shortcomings relate to recognition and measurement
infringements (13%) and disclosures (25%).
The securities regulator
disclosed these in its 2022 Corporate Reporting Enforcement and Regulatory
Activities Report released on Wednesday. The enforcement actions, which dropped
from 250 in prior year, are based on a total of 640 IFRS-compliant financial
statements the regulators examined last year. This figure represents 16% of all issuers.
“Material departures from IFRS
were assessed in relation to recognition and/or measurement and presentation of
assets and liabilities, as well as to related disclosures since the concept of
materiality is pervasive to the financial statements as a whole,” ESMA explained.
The regulator added: “In
particular, it could be reasonably expected that omitting, obscuring, or
misstating material information in the notes could influence decisions that
primary users of the financial statements make on the basis of those financial
statements.”
In 2021, ESMA and its national
enforces undertook 771 examinations of IFRS-compliant financial statements,
representing 17% of all issuers. In addition, they took enforcement actions against 250
issuers during that year.
EMSA Shares Finding on 2021
Enforcement Priorities
Meanwhile, ESMA in 2021 issued the
European Common Enforcement Priorities Statement (ECEP) for year-end IFRS
financial statements. Last year, the securities regulator and its enforcers
examined 171 securities issuers to check for adherence to these
priorities.
ESMA said it found that “there
is significant room for improvement in disclosures of climate-related matters
by issuers in their financial statements.” The regulator added that
although its enforcers found only a few "material departures" from IFRS, more
effort is needed to improve the level of transparency in the application of
requirements related to expected credit losses.
Additionally, ESMA found that
“issuers generally took ESMA’s recommendations on COVID-19 into consideration
in an appropriate manner.”
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The European Securities and
Markets Authority (ESMA
ESMA
European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) is an independent Authority of the European Union that is responsible for the safety, security, and stability of the European Unions’ financial system and is charged with protecting the public. The European supervisory authority for the securities sector, ESMA was established on 1 January 2011. The European Securities and Markets Authority is an independent EU authority based in Paris. It aims to contribute to the effectiveness and stability of t
European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) is an independent Authority of the European Union that is responsible for the safety, security, and stability of the European Unions’ financial system and is charged with protecting the public. The European supervisory authority for the securities sector, ESMA was established on 1 January 2011. The European Securities and Markets Authority is an independent EU authority based in Paris. It aims to contribute to the effectiveness and stability of t
Read this Term) and its national enforcers in 2022 took enforcement
actions against 225 issuers whose securities are admitted for trading on
European regulated markets. The actions are based on their financial statements
drawn up in accordance with the International Financial Reporting Standards
(IFRS).
ESMA Highlights Biggest
Shortfall
The actions were mostly directed
at resolving shortcomings related to “accounting for financial instruments,
impairment of non-financial assets, presentation of financial statements and
revenue recognition.” Other shortcomings relate to recognition and measurement
infringements (13%) and disclosures (25%).
The securities regulator
disclosed these in its 2022 Corporate Reporting Enforcement and Regulatory
Activities Report released on Wednesday. The enforcement actions, which dropped
from 250 in prior year, are based on a total of 640 IFRS-compliant financial
statements the regulators examined last year. This figure represents 16% of all issuers.
“Material departures from IFRS
were assessed in relation to recognition and/or measurement and presentation of
assets and liabilities, as well as to related disclosures since the concept of
materiality is pervasive to the financial statements as a whole,” ESMA explained.
The regulator added: “In
particular, it could be reasonably expected that omitting, obscuring, or
misstating material information in the notes could influence decisions that
primary users of the financial statements make on the basis of those financial
statements.”
In 2021, ESMA and its national
enforces undertook 771 examinations of IFRS-compliant financial statements,
representing 17% of all issuers. In addition, they took enforcement actions against 250
issuers during that year.
EMSA Shares Finding on 2021
Enforcement Priorities
Meanwhile, ESMA in 2021 issued the
European Common Enforcement Priorities Statement (ECEP) for year-end IFRS
financial statements. Last year, the securities regulator and its enforcers
examined 171 securities issuers to check for adherence to these
priorities.
ESMA said it found that “there
is significant room for improvement in disclosures of climate-related matters
by issuers in their financial statements.” The regulator added that
although its enforcers found only a few "material departures" from IFRS, more
effort is needed to improve the level of transparency in the application of
requirements related to expected credit losses.
Additionally, ESMA found that
“issuers generally took ESMA’s recommendations on COVID-19 into consideration
in an appropriate manner.”
OpenFin Adds Dow Jones; Quantile Taps SwapAgent FX, read today's news nuggets.