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Financial Stability Board’s letter addresses financial topics for upcoming G20 meeting

Fintech Financial Stability Board G20 Of Interest to Non-US Persons Cross Border Activities Climate-Related Financial Risks

Fintech

On February 20, the Financial Stability Board (FSB) released a letter from its Chair, Klaas Knot, to the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors ahead of the February 28-29 G20 meeting, setting up the agenda for maintaining global financial stability. The FSB is an organization made up of senior financial officials from G20 countries as well as international financial organizations including the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the European Central Bank. The letter addressed financial system vulnerabilities, including the takeaways from the March 2023 banking crisis, nonbank financial intermediation (NBFI), digitalization of finance, climate change effects, and cross-border payment efficiency.

On the first topic, the letter highlighted lessons wrought by the March 2023 banking crisis; the FSB advocated the need for public-sector backstop funding mechanisms, and more analytical work on interest rate and liquidity risk to explore vulnerabilities. On NBFI, the letter noted a structural vulnerability in asset management as the “potential mismatch between the liquidity of fund investments and daily redemption of fund units in open-ended funds[.]” On digital innovation, the letter urges the G20 to closely monitor any risks to financial stability, including crypto, tokens, and artificial intelligence. On climate change, the FSB plans to further analyze climate-related financial risks to financial stability. Last, on cross-border payments, the G20 Cross-border Payments Roadmap goal is to make cross-border payments “faster, cheaper, and more transparent and inclusive” while keeping their integrity and maintaining the “safety of the system.” The letter noted that FSB has collaborated with AML experts in both the public and private sectors to “increase the efficiency of payments systems and further enhance their integrity and safety.”