TY - BOOK ID - 85673280 TI - Cybersecurity Risk Supervision AU - Gaidosch, Tamas. AU - Adelmann, Frank. AU - Morozova, Anastasiia. AU - Wilson, Christopher. AU - National Bureau of Economic Research. PY - 2019 SN - 1513515276 1513507540 151351525X PB - Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, DB - UniCat KW - Information and Market Efficiency • Event Studies • Insider Trading KW - Capital Budgeting • Fixed Investment and Inventory Studies • Capacity KW - Banks and Banking KW - Capital and Ownership Structure KW - Computer security KW - Cyber risk KW - Economic sectors KW - Finance KW - Finance: General KW - Financial Institutions and Services: General KW - Financial regulation and supervision KW - Financial Risk and Risk Management KW - Financial risk management KW - Financial sector policy and analysis KW - Financial sector stability KW - Financial sector KW - Financial services industry KW - Financial services law & regulation KW - Financing Policy KW - General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation KW - Goodwill KW - Industries: Financial Services KW - Information technology in revenue administration KW - Information technology KW - Online Safety & Privacy KW - Operational risk KW - Public finance & taxation KW - Public Finance KW - Revenue administration KW - Revenue KW - Security measures KW - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue: General KW - Technology KW - Value of Firms KW - United States UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:85673280 AB - This paper highlights the emerging supervisory practices that contribute to effective cybersecurity risk supervision, with an emphasis on how these practices can be adopted by those agencies that are at an early stage of developing a supervisory approach to strengthen cyber resilience. Financial sector supervisory authorities the world over are working to establish and implement a framework for cyber risk supervision. Cyber risk often stems from malicious intent, and a successful cyber attack—unlike most other sources of risk—can shut down a supervised firm immediately and lead to systemwide disruptions and failures. The probability of attack has increased as financial systems have become more reliant on information and communication technologies and as threats have continued to evolve. ER -