EU Supervisory Authorities highlight cyber resilience, crypto risks and
regulatory simplification in 2025 annual report. The report has indirect
relevance for retail trading and CFD markets through its focus on consumer
protection, crypto-asset risks and PRIIPs rules.

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.

It does not introduce new CFD or leveraged trading measures, but
continues emphasis on disclosure standards, fraud prevention and supervisory
convergence across EU retail markets.

EU
Supervisors Expand Cyber and DORA

The Joint Committee of the European Supervisory Authorities said it
maintained a central coordinating role in 2025 with the European Commission and
the European Systemic Risk Board. Chaired by EIOPA, it focused on EU-wide
supervisory coordination.

The report covered consumer protection, financial stability and
supervisory cooperation. It said 2025 was shaped by geopolitical uncertainty,
faster digitalisation and financial innovation. The ESAs said they aimed to
keep “regulatory frameworks robust, proportionate, and forward-looking”.

A key focus was the Digital Operational Resilience Act. The ESAs said
they delivered all required legal instruments and issued guidance ahead of the
17 January 2025 application date. They also designated 19 critical third-party
ICT providers between April and November 2025, with the European Banking
Authority acting as lead overseer.

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Supervisors Launch CITE and Review

New cyber coordination tools were introduced, including the Cyber
Incident Information Sharing and Threat Intelligence Exchange. The ESAs said
these measures “constitute a comprehensive and coordinated effort to bolster
the EU’s resilience to ICT-related risks”.

On regulation, the committee supported EU efforts to simplify financial
rules, including PRIIPs Key Information Document work and SFDR reporting
adjustments, including deprioritising one annual report. It said simplification
must not weaken financial stability or consumer protection.

ESAs
Highlight Risks Across Financial System

In its risk assessment, the ESAs said geopolitical tensions, trade
restrictions and global conflicts increased uncertainty and market volatility.
They warned institutions should remain vigilant, saying “strengthening risk
management practices, enhancing resilience to cyber threats, and ensuring
preparedness for market shocks are essential”.

The report also flagged risks from cyber threats, ICT third-party
concentration, digital assets and non-bank finance. Crypto risks were
highlighted, with warnings on limited legal protection depending on asset type.

Consumer protection remained a priority. The ESAs updated PRIIPs guidance
and reported 12 administrative sanctions across Belgium, Denmark, Hungary and
Poland. They also issued warnings on crypto fraud and AI-driven scams.

Other initiatives included ESAP development, AMLA cooperation, BigTech
monitoring, securitisation review and a supervisory data exchange system. The ESAs said geopolitical risks, cyber threats and structural market
shifts remain key financial stability concerns.

This article was written by Tareq Sikder at www.financemagnates.com.



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