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Balance of payments - International transactions (BPM6) (bop_6)

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National Reference Metadata in Single Integrated Metadata Structure (SIMS)

Compiling agency: Statistics Sweden

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The different domains relevant for external sector statistics (Balance of Payments -BOP, International Investment Position - IIP, Foreign Direct Investment - FDI, and International Trade in Services - ITS) sent to Eurostat are based on the BOP Vademecum reflecting requirements laid down in the Regulation (EC) No 184/2005 on Community statistics concerning BOP, ITS, and FDI, as amended by the Commission Regulation (EU) No 555/2012 of 22 June 2012 and Regulation (EU) No 2016/1013 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2016.

These datasets are broadly in line with the sixth edition of the IMF’s Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual (BPM6), the OECD Benchmark Definition of Foreign Direct Investment (BD4) and the Manual on Statistics of International Trade in services 2010 (MSITS 2010).

Monthly and quarterly BOP summarize transactions between residents and nonresidents during a specific period. BOP data consists of the goods and services account, the primary income account, the secondary income account, the capital account, and the functional categories of the financial account (direct investment, portfolio investment, financial derivatives and employee stock options, other investment and reserve assets). Differences between the current and capital account on the one hand and the financial account on the other hand are visible under Net errors and omissions that result from imperfections in source data, inconsistent reporting by enterprises and compilation issues. 

Quarterly IIP shows for a country all financial claims on nonresidents and a country’s liabilities to nonresidents at a certain point in time. The breakdown follows the functional categories of the financial account (direct investment, portfolio investment, financial derivatives (other than reserve assets) and employee stock options, other investment, and reserve assets). The sign of the balance shows whether the domestic economic sectors have a net creditor or net debtor position vis-à-vis other countries. The other changes in financial assets and liabilities accounts (revaluations due to exchange rate, revaluations due to other price changes and other changes in the volume) reconcile the balance of payments and IIP for a specific period, by showing changes due to economic events other than transactions between residents and nonresidents.

Annual FDI statistics (consisting of financial account transactions, current account primary income figures and IIP position data) is a category of cross-border investment associated with a resident in one economy (direct investor) having control or a significant degree of influence on the management of an enterprise that is resident in another economy (direct investment enterprise). By convention, such a lasting interest exists when a direct investor owns 10% or more of the voting power or the equivalent (for an unincorporated enterprise). Operational definitions of control and influence are explained in BPM6 § 6.12. Furthermore, the definition of direct investment is the same as in the fourth edition of the OECD Benchmark Definition of Foreign Direct Investment.

Annual ITS statistics record services transactions between residents and non-residents and cover the following categories: manufacturing services on physical inputs owned by others; Maintenance and repair services, not included elsewhere; transport; travel; construction; insurance and pension services; financial services; charges for the use of intellectual property, not included elsewhere; telecommunication, computer and information services; other business services; personal, cultural and recreational services; and government goods and services, not included elsewhere. The services categories are listed in the Extended Balance of Payments Services Classification (EBOPS 2010).

12 May 2025

The overall conceptual framework of BOP, IIP, FDI and ITS are in broad conformity with the most recent manuals as well as the EC Guidelines and Eurostat’s Vademecum.

Statistical concepts and definitions relate to basic internationally accepted standards and guidelines for external sector statistics; for instance:

  • All resident-nonresident transactions covered;
  • The concept of residency adhered to;
  • For the BOP, the concept of gross reporting is followed for the current and capital account; and the net basis for financial account transactions (separately for the individual asset and liability components);
  • The change of economic ownership principle soundly applied;
  • FDI is defined as equity ownership representing 10 percent or more of the voting power;
  • The accrual basis is broadly applied;
  • Market values or appropriate substitute measures are used;
  • the residence of Special Purpose Entities (SPEs) is attributed to the economy in which they are legally domiciled or incorporated;
  • Overall, the classification, netting and ordering in the IIP is consistent with BPM6; current, capital, and financial accounts of the balance of payments statement are defined according to the BPM6.

Known Deviation (Source: Vademecum):

BOP/IIP data are to be compiled following the debtor/creditor approach, instead of the “transactor” approach. In other words, the geographical allocation of assets/credits is to be done on the basis of the residency of the issuer/debtor and not of the “transactor”. This is particularly relevant for portfolio and direct investment functional categories, which record tradable instruments. This approach is to be followed consistently in the geographical and sector allocation of investment income, financial transactions and stocks.

Specific deviations for Sweden: FDI equity positions in listed companies are not valued at market values. Instead they are valued at Own Funds at Book Value (OFBV), which also is the valuation method for non-listed companies.

Institutional units are defined in conformity with BPM6 and relate to those that have a predominant centre of economic interest in the country. In principle, any individual, corporation or other institution that provides information on the transactions/positions between the residents and non-residents of a country during a given period is included. Resident institutional units engaged with nonresidents also cover in principle:

  • incorporated or unincorporated affiliates of nonresident companies; and SPEs with little or no physical presence;
  • resident territorial enclaves in the rest of the world (e.g., embassies, military basis);
  • free zones/bonded warehouses/factories operated by offshore enterprises under customs control;
  • Citizens who work or live temporarily in another country (seasonal and cross border commuters, students and patients).

Not applicable.

The reference area describes the geographical area covered by the data disseminated. According to the BOP Vademecum, the reference area is the economic territory, country, or region for which external sector statistics are provided. The country code list follows the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 classification and is a "cross-domain" code list, used also in National Accounts. The codes used for various regional groupings are harmonized across international agencies that use the BOP-DSD.

The monthly BOP (MBOP), quarterly BOP (QBOP) and quarterly FDI transactions summarize economic transactions between residents and nonresidents during the respective reference period.  The annual ITS dataset summarizes services transactions over the period of one year.

The quarterly IIP statement as well as the annual FDI stock statistics refer to a point in time at the end of the reference period; i.e., the last day of a quarter or year, respectively. 

(i) Accuracy can be measured using the concept of Reliability - defined as the closeness of the initial estimated value to the subsequent estimated value. This section refers to the current Eurostat Quality Report 2.1.1. Quantitative assessment of revisions. Complementary information on Revisions are also provided under S17 Data Revision.

The quantitative analysis focuses on the size of revisions, their direction and the reliability of trends using the data provided by countries to Eurostat.

For the Monthly BOP, Quarterly BOP and Quarterly IIP items, revisions are assessed using two types of indicators both of which are based on the comparison between first and last assessments:

  • Directional stability indicators measure how often the first assessment is subsequently revised in the same direction (the upward revisions ratio and the directional reliability indicator).
  • Relative size indicators measure the difference between the first and the last assessments. These absolute differences may be quantified relative to the underlying series (when strictly positive) or to the underlying outstanding amounts. These indicators are the symmetric mean absolute percentage ratio, mean absolute comparative ratio and for net/balance series the net relative revisions.

(ii) Accuracy can be measured using the concept of Vintage Analysis. This section refers to the current Eurostat Quality Report 2.1.2 Vintage Analysis. For the assessment of annual data (ITSS, credit and debit, FDI flows and positions, inward and outward), the analysis focuses on the differences between the values as reported in the last 4 data deliveries to Eurostat. The counterpart area is Extra EU27 and Rest of the World.

(iii) Accuracy can be measured using the concept of Plausibility – referring to the absence of unexplained changes. This section refers to the current Eurostat Quality Report 2.2. Plausibility. This concept calculates the share of unallocated partner or activity from total (%) for ITS, FDI flows and positions.

Statistics Sweden´s comments and reflections on accuracy in Swedish BOP and IIP data:

 

Monthly BOP:

Services: The revisions are mainly due to the fact that the initial reporting is always forecasted monthly trade in services and the final reporting is from actual quarterly survey results. 

FDI income on equity: The revisions are mainly due to that the initial reporting is forecasted income and the final reporting is from actual annual survey results. Adjustments have also recently been made to better align with the concept of Net Operating Surplus (NOS).

Other investment income: The revisions are mainly due to the fact that the initial reporting is forecasted income for non-financial corporations and the final reporting is from actual quarterly survey results regarding non-financial corporations.

Secondary income: The revisions are mainly due to that the initial reporting is forecasted secondary income for most items and the final reporting is from actual quarterly reporting from respondents.

 

Quarterly BOP:

FDI income on equity: The revisions are mainly due to the fact that the initial reporting is forecasted income and the final reporting is from actual (annual) survey results. Adjustments have also recently been made to better align with the concept of Net Operating Surplus (NOS).

PI income: The revisions are partly due to the implementation of SHS, which is now also implemented for the reference years 2019 and 2020

Direct investment: The initial reporting on FDI flows comes from larger FDI enterprise groups that reports to Statistics Sweden on a monthly basis. In connection to the annual FDI survey, additional FDI transactions are captured from enterprises that do not report on a monthly basis. This is the main explanation for FDI revisions in the financial account.

Portfolio investments: 

  • Portfolio investment: The revisions are mainly due to revised numbers from reporting Enterprises in the Swedish database on securities holdings (VINN) and in the Swedish securities database on debt securities issued by Swedish issuers  (SVDB). The revisions of assets are partly due to the fact that a part of assets abroad is collected semi-annually. Quarterly data is forecasted and replaced by collected data two quarters later.

Quarterly IIP:

Direct investment:  The revisions are mainly due to the fact that the initial reporting is forecasted FDI stocks and the final reporting is from annual survey results from the Coordinated Direct Investment Survey (CDIS).

Portfolio investment: The revisions are mainly due to revised numbers from reporting Enterprises in the Swedish database on securities holdings (VINN) and in the Swedish securities database on debt securities issued by Swedish issuers  (SVDB). The revisions of assets are partly due to the fact that a part of assets abroad is collected semi-annually. Quarterly data is forecasted and replaced by collected data two quarters later.

All data sent to Eurostat are in Millions of Euro for Euro Area countries and in Millions of National currency for non-Euro Area countries. The unit of dissemination on Statistics Sweden's website is generally billions of Swedish Kronor (SEK), even though some data series are disseminated in SEK millions.

Not applicable.

This quality concept refers to whether the composition of data sources (surveys, ITRS (International Transactions Reporting System), administrative data, ITGS, monetary and financial statistics, etc.), in principle, sufficiently covers the compilation of BOP, IIP, FDI and ITS.

Data source: The Swedish data collection system is basically a direct reporting system supported by settlement data. Other sources are listed below.

  • Goods: Customs statistics and Intrastat supplemented by data from ship registers, surveys on bunkers and other goods procured in ports.
  • Sea transport: Quarterly sample survey.
  • Services:  data on trade in services is collected from a quarterly survey. The survey is divided into two parts, the first of which covers general foreign trade in services, and it is aimed at the industry and size of the companies. The second part collects information about travel currency, and it is aimed at banks.
  • Investment income: FDI: Annual sample survey for income on equity. Portfolio investment income are based on estimations. Other investment income from monthly and quarterly surveys. Income on reserve assets are reported by the Rikbank. 
  • Portfolio investment: Debt securities: Data from reference period 2019 and onwards is based on national databases Securities holding statistics and Securities issues. Foreign holdings in Swedish debt securities are estimated by subtracting Swedish investors’ holdings from total Swedish issues of debt securities.  Verification and other statistical practices: coverage of debt securities is compared against results of the creditor data published in the Coordinated Portfolio Investment Survey. 
  • Direct investment: Stock data and reinvested earnings are based on an annual sample survey. FDI transactions and interest from FDI debt positions are reported in a monthly cut-off survey. 
  • Trade credits: Quarterly sample survey.
  • Reserve assets: Data are based on Sveriges Riksbank's balance sheet data.

Eurostat Website:

BOP: monthly and quarterly

FDI flows and positions: annually

IIP: quarterly and annually        

ITS: annually

 

Statistics Sweden´s Website:

BOP: quarterly

IIP: quarterly       

ITS: quarterly

Detailed FDI income flows and positions: annually

Detailed Portfolio investment asset positions: semi-annually.

According to the provisions of the Commission Regulation (EU) No 184/2005 and ECB Guideline ECB/2011/23 datasets are reported by countries to Eurostat with the following timeliness:

The BOP regulation defines the timeliness and sets the deadlines for the data transmission to Eurostat as follows:

  • Monthly BOP: 44 days after the end of the reference period;
  • Quarterly BOP, quarterly IIP and quarterly revaluations: 82/85 days after the end of the reference period;
  • ITS: 9 months after the end of the reference period;
  • FDI: 9 months after the end of the reference period (21 months for the activity breakdown).

Comments by Statistics Sweden: National data collection and processing timetables are adequate to meet timeliness and periodicity for disseminating the BOP, IIP, and ITS statistics according to the timetable set by Eurostat. The exception to this statement is the T+9 months timetable for delivering annual FDI data. It is a real challenge for Statistics Sweden to send provisional survey result data at T+9 months and Statistics Sweden continues to process annual FDI survey data until the publishing of BOP Q3 in December each year.

This indicator refers to Chapter 5.3.1 and the corresponding tables of the Eurostat Quality Report: Asymmetries with regard to main ITS and FDI items.

Further information and country-specific feedback is provided below. 

The Balance of payments statistics follow the recommendations in the IMF Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual Sixth Edition (BPM6).

Statistics according to BPM6 were introduced and published in Sweden for the first time in December 2014. In connection to this, the definition of several items in the balance of payments statistics were changed. The data collection was changed from 2013 and as far as possible, relevant data were also reconstructed for the period before and after January 2013. However, some breaks in time series remains, which have not been possible to bridge.

Sweden's membership in the EU has also entailed certain special requirements. The statistics that cannot be compared with statistics from the time before EU entry. There are also breaks in time series in older periods that come from previous manual changes but also in some cases break in time series are due to changes in methodology.