A strategic look at how banks must adapt to enhanced demands on estimation, information provision, and collateral mobilization.
The Single Resolution Board's (SRB) consultation on its updated Operational Guidance on Liquidity and Funding in Resolution is more than a simple consolidation of rules; it is a targeted strengthening of operational expectations across liquidity estimation, measurement, and reporting, and collateral mobilization. By merging its frameworks into a single text, the SRB is making one thing clear: these are not separate compliance tasks. They are interconnected disciplines that form a single operational capability that banks must be able to demonstrate under crisis conditions.
The Technical Meeting on the Operational Guidance also clarified that the consolidation is intended to reduce duplication between EfB 3.1, 3.2, and 3.3 and to encourage the reuse of existing analyses, data, and frameworks where appropriate.
For banks, this means the era of treating resolution planning as a theoretical, "check-the-box" exercise is over. Let's break down what this means in practice.
By merging its frameworks into a single text, the SRB is making one thing clear: these are not separate compliance tasks. They are interconnected disciplines that form a single operational capability that banks must be able to demonstrate under crisis conditions.
Erik Becker Product Director
Regnology
The starting point for any credible resolution plan is an accurate forecast of liquidity needs through the Liquidity in Resolution Estimate (LRE). The SRB is not simply asking for an update; it is raising expectations for the speed, flexibility, and resolution-specific nature of the underlying modelling capability.
What has changed operationally?
A 24-hour turnaround leaves little room for fragmented data sourcing, lengthy reconciliations, or unclear ownership. The capability test is not only about speed; it is about proving that the bank has a robust, auditable, and repeatable production process.
Erik Becker Product Director
Regnology
Once needs are estimated, how quickly can an institution provide an updated view of its actual position?
The SRB's answer is: within short notice, defined as a maximum of 24 hours. The Technical Meeting further clarified that this may require banks not only to extract existing figures, but also to update estimates and rerun relevant scenarios where assumptions or inputs change.
High-frequency capability means more than once per day, with the reference point as close as possible to submission. This does not imply continuous real-time reporting, but it does require high-frequency capabilities, including intraday information where relevant.
Liquidity data collection and capability testing exercises are therefore more than a fire drill: they assess whether a bank's data systems, MIS, governance, and escalation processes can produce accurate, complete, and timely information under pressure. The Joint Liquidity Template is strongly encouraged because it is used for both exercises and crisis purposes, although equivalent formats may be used.
The explicit link to BCBS 239 is a clear signal that data lineage, governance, accuracy, completeness, and timeliness matter as much as the final numbers. Manual workarounds may still be used where necessary, but proxies and manual steps must be documented and controlled.
For Reporting and Operations teams, this is a stark operational test. A 24-hour turnaround leaves little room for fragmented data sourcing, lengthy reconciliations or unclear ownership. The capability test is not only about speed; it is about proving that the bank has a robust, auditable and repeatable production process.
In resolution, collateral is central to access to funding. The SRB assumes that a bank's most liquid assets may already be encumbered, shifting the focus to a broader and more operational view of available collateral. The critical update is the emphasis on the estimated time to mobilize assets.
This is not a standard treasury reporting task. It is a cross-functional data and execution challenge that requires coordination among Treasury, Legal, Operations, and collateral management functions.
What do banks need to know?
Regnology provides end-to-end solutions designed to support this evolving operational reality.
Our cloud-native platform, built on a unified granular data model, connects information from across the enterprise to create a consistent, group-wide view.
By integrating data management, ALM, and scenario-analysis capabilities with structured information preparation, Regnology empowers banks to conduct the rigorous stress testing required by the SRB and deliver accurate, on-demand reporting with confidence.
Where required by the institution, Annex II and Annex III can also be set up in the solution, while banks may continue to use their own systems and formats where these provide the required information effectively.
The SRB has made its direction clear. The priority for institutions is now to assess whether existing data, models, governance, and operational processes can produce decision-useful liquidity and collateral information quickly enough under resolution conditions.
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