The Directorate-General for Financial Stability, Financial Services and Capital Markets Union (DG FISMA) is a Directorate-General (DG) of the European Commission. It is one of the thirty three DGs created and named to reflect their functions.
The main responsibilities of the Directorate-General FISMA include initiating and implementing EU policy in the areas of banking and finance, including the Capital Markets Union, and corporate reporting and auditing.
After the 2008 financial crisis, the EU responded with a series of reforms to ensure financial market stability and to enhance the supervision of financial markets.
The operational role of DG FISMA is to ensure that EU legislation is fully implemented, to monitor the effectiveness of these reforms and to respond to any further financial risks that may become apparent.
The mission of DG FISMA (Directorate-General for Financial Stability, Financial Services and Capital Markets Union) is to ensure the stability of the EU financial system, safeguard the interests of savers and investors, combat financial crime, and facilitate accessible capital flow for both businesses and consumers throughout the European Union.
The Directorate-General for Financial Stability, Financial Services and Capital Markets Union (DG FISMA) achieves its objectives through a combination of legislative and non-legislative tools, fundamentally relying on the TFEU articles (e.g., 49, 56, 63, and 114) to develop and enforce a common regulatory frameworkâÂÂknown as the Single RulebookâÂÂfor the EU financial system. This legislative work occurs across Level 1 (regulations and directives) and Level 2 (detailed delegated/implementing acts), often prepared in close collaboration with the three European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs). Furthermore, DG FISMA ensures the correct transposition and application of EU law by Member States, monitors risks in cooperation with bodies like the SSM and ESRB, and plays a critical role in the international financial regulatory agenda (G20, FSB) and the design and supervision of EU sanctions.
DG FISMA's core strategy for the 2020-2024 period was centred on six key objectives:
DG FISMA's key performance indicators (KPIs) for the 2020-2024 period primarily targeted increasing financial integration (decreasing home bias and increasing cross-border banking assets), maintaining financial stability (keeping systemic stress and bank capitalisation stable while reducing MREL shortfalls), enhancing market access and protection (increasing IPOs and retail investment while decreasing fund costs), scaling up sustainable investment (increasing green bond issuance and Taxonomy alignment), boosting digital uptake (increasing non-MFI payments and IT spending on innovation while decreasing cyber risk), and strengthening the international role of the Euro and sanctions enforcement.
According to its latest organogram, the DG FISMA is organized into five directorates:
In the current legislature period (2019-2024) DG FISMA focuses on the achievement of one of the six top European Commission's political priorities, namely "An economy that works for people".
Maria LuÃÂs Albuquerque has been the EU Commissioner for this area since July 2024; John Berrigan is the Director-General and he manages DG FISMA. David O'Sullivan, the EU's Sanctions Envoy, is based within this DG.
In 2024 the DG had 375 employees.