BIS, ECB and IMF Publish Third Part of Handbook on Securities Statistics
IMF Press Release No. 12/459
November 28, 2012
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2012/pr12459.htm
The Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the European Central
Bank (ECB) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today jointly
released the third and final part of the Handbook on Securities Statistics, which covers equity securities issues and holdings. The aim of the Handbook
is to assist national and international agencies in the production of
relevant, coherent and internationally comparable securities statistics
for use in monetary policy formulation and financial stability analysis.
The Handbook is the first publication of its kind dealing
exclusively with the conceptual framework for the compilation and
presentation of securities statistics. As such, it directly addresses
one of the recommendations endorsed by the Ministers of Finance and
Central Bank Governors of the Group of Twenty Economies (G20) concerning
the need to fill data gaps and to strengthen data collection.
Recommendation 7 of the report The Financial Crisis and Information
Gaps, prepared by the Financial Stability Board Secretariat and IMF
staff, called on central banks and, where relevant, statistical offices,
particularly those of the G20 economies, to participate in the BIS data
collection on securities and to contribute to the further development
of the Handbook.
Existing international statistical standards, such as the System of National Accounts 2008 and the IMF Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual, sixth edition, provided the foundations of the Handbook. It has also benefited from comments of experts from central banks, statistical institutions, and international organisations.
The first part of the Handbook, which covers debt securities
issues, was released in May 2009 and the second part, covering debt
securities holdings, was released in September 2010. The Handbook can be downloaded from the websites of the BIS, the ECB and the IMF, respectively.
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