Success
Service Bank Accounts 25% Clearing and Settlement Infrastructures 20%
Specialism Prudential Standards 85% Operational Resilience 72%
2026-03-17 15:47:46 · csoo@vixio.com
ID
2975272
GUID
509d2e4d6914541a99fdc17e4713b4e6

Classification

Service
Bank Accounts (25%)

This update concerns prudential liquidity standards for banks, which falls outside the payments-specific regulatory scope; it addresses asset monetisation and stress testing rather than payment services, instruments, or infrastructure.

Clearing and Settlement Infrastructures (20%)

While banks provide payment accounts, this update focuses on prudential liquidity management and capital adequacy rather than payment account access, use, or consumer protections.

Specialism
Prudential Standards (85%)

The PRA's proposals focus on modernizing liquidity standards for banks to ensure they can monetize liquid assets during stress events, which directly addresses prudential soundness requirements for financial institutions.

Operational Resilience (72%)

Low confidence — requires human review. The stress testing and internal data collection requirements have operational resilience elements, but the primary focus is liquidity prudential standards rather than system recovery or DORA-specific resilience frameworks.

Pipeline Progress

🔄 Pipeline Journey

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TITLE: United Kingdom's Prudential Regulation Authority Publishes Liquidity Reform Proposals BODY: On March 17, 2026, the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) published consultation proposals aimed at modernising liquidity standards for banks to ensure they can monetise liquid assets quickly during fast-paced stress events, such as the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in 2023. The PRA's proposals require firms to evaluate their liquidity and identify barriers to monetising assets, conduct internal stress tests on rapid outflows within one week (alongside existing monthly testing), and remove exemptions for sovereign bonds and other "level 1 assets" from annual testing of non-liquid asset monetisation. The proposals also seek to reduce data requests in related areas, preventing an overall increase in reporting burden, and encourage firms to be operationally prepared to use central bank facilities when needed. Importantly, the proposals do not set additional requirements for banks to hold more liquid assets, instead focusing on ensuring existing assets are genuinely usable during stress events. Sam Woods, Deputy Governor for Prudential Regulation and Chief Executive Officer of the PRA, stated the update reflects key lessons learned from recent years and technological advancement in banking, payments, and communications since liquidity standards were last updated following the 2008 financial crisis. The proposals factor in significant lessons from the 2023 collapses of Silicon Valley Bank and Credit Suisse. The consultation represents part of the PRA's broader regulatory reform agenda, which includes simplifying capital requirements for smaller firms through the Strong and Simple initiative, introducing Basel 3.1 for larger firms, and supporting growth in the mutuals sector and insurance firms through targeted measures. The full consultation is available on the Bank of England website.
  • Scraped:2026-03-17 15:47:46
  • Created:2026-03-17 15:47:46
  • By:csoo@vixio.com (59)