TY - BOOK ID - 85599615 TI - Sweden : Financial Sector Assessment Program-Technical Note-Stress Testing. PY - 2017 SN - 1484322827 PB - Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, DB - UniCat KW - Sweden. KW - Kingdom of Sweden KW - Konungariket Sverige KW - Schweden KW - Shvet︠s︡ii︠a︡ KW - Suecia KW - Suède KW - Suwēden KW - Sverige KW - Svezia KW - Szwecja KW - Zviedrija KW - Zweden KW - スウェーデン KW - Banks and Banking KW - Finance: General KW - Macroeconomics KW - Money and Monetary Policy KW - Industries: Financial Services KW - Financial Institutions and Services: Government Policy and Regulation KW - Banks KW - Depository Institutions KW - Micro Finance Institutions KW - Mortgages KW - Personal Income, Wealth, and Their Distributions KW - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General KW - Pension Funds KW - Non-bank Financial Institutions KW - Financial Instruments KW - Institutional Investors KW - Finance KW - Banking KW - Monetary economics KW - Stress testing KW - Personal income KW - Credit KW - Solvency stress testing KW - Financial sector policy and analysis KW - Money KW - National accounts KW - Mutual funds KW - Financial institutions KW - Financial risk management KW - Banks and banking KW - Income KW - Sweden UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:85599615 AB - This Technical Note explains the stress testing approach of the 2016 Financial Sector Assessment Program in assessment of risk in the Swedish financial sector and provides the results of the tests. Stress tests covered three major segments of the domestic financial sector. The resilience of the Swedish banking system was tested against solvency, liquidity, and contagion risks. The solvency stress test suggests that banks would be resilient to severe economic distress. Bank liquidity stress tests suggest that banks could withstand severe funding and market liquidity shocks, but there are pockets of vulnerability. The overall stress testing exercise suggests that there is room for improvement in the individual components of authorities’ stress testing framework. ER -