The CCyB default rate in Australia has been set at zero percent of risk-weighted assets since it was introduced in 2016.
December 22, 2022Lenders must ensure they are operationally ready by September to implement loan limits based on DTI multiples or LTV ratios.
June 15, 2022The collaboration will include areas such as cross-border payments, digital payments, and other areas related to settlement and market infrastructure.
February 21, 2022The BOT will introduce virtual bank licences, relax fintech investment limits for banks, promote open data, and establish TCFD aligned disclosure standards.
February 7, 2022MAS and Bank Indonesia will deepen cooperation on payments innovation, monetary policy, macroprudential policy, financial stability, and AML/CFT.
January 22, 2022The macroprudential policy toolbox will include measures that can be used to adjust the banks' required capital and liquidity levels or assign new risk weights to specific sectors.
January 6, 2022APRA confirmed that the CCyB would be set at the new default level of 1 percent of RWA from 1 January 2023, a feature of the new bank capital framework.
December 22, 2021APRA has defined certain credit measures it can take to address systemic risks if needed, such as temporary lending limits and minimum lending standards.
November 12, 2021Banks should operate with a mortgage serviceability buffer of at least 3 percentage points over the loan interest rate, and control lending at high debt-to-income ratios.
October 7, 2021