Title: 19th%20XBRL%20International%20Conference%20
119th XBRL International ConferenceReducing
regulatory burden with XBRL a catalyst for
better reportingJune 22-25, 2009Paris, France
- Banking Supervision Track
- XBRL-based Basel II Reporting System Experience
of Reserve Bank of India - A S Ramasastri P R Ravimohan
- June 24, 2009
2Our Journey . . .
- First Three Steps
- The Basel II Path
- Fast Track XBRL
- Future Roadmap
3First Three Steps
4The First Step (2001-04)
- About 20 departments of Reserve Bank of India
receive data at about 20 locations from about 200
commercial banks with about 70000 branches - Templates for reporting, called returns, which
are around 250 as on date - Varying degrees of technology levels across banks
- Attempts to rationalize the returns and to
streamline multiple modes of data submission
resulted in the origin of Online Return Filing
System (ORFS)
5Step Two (2004-07)
- An important fortnightly return called Form A has
been brought under ORFS - It has been designed and developed using XML tags
to be in readiness for adopting XBRL - Based on the experience, the system has been
extended to another 50 returns - To standardize the data elements across returns
and to be in line with international practices,
XBRL was considered
6The Big Leap (2007-09)
- The Governor formed a High Level Steering
Committee with the Deputy Governor as Chairperson
to implement XBRL-based data reporting by banks - After a pilot study and feasibility analysis, the
Committee mandated implementation of the newly
introduced Basel II reporting system under XBRL - Basel II implementation is a simultaneous
journey, going parallel
7The Basel II Path
8Indian Regulatory Architecture
- India has been adopting international best
practices in the area of banking regulation in a
well calibrated manner which is suitable to
requirements of the financial system - Reserve Bank of India has emphasized on
strengthening of regulation on capital adequacy
as a key parameter in promoting financial
stability
9Basel-I Implementation
- India adopted Basel I in a phased manner from
1992 onwards - India stipulated the capital to risk weighted
asset ratio of 9.0 as against international
norms of 8 and a Tier I capital ratio of 6. - Capital charge for market risk in line with
market risk amendment of 1996 to the Basel I
accord was adopted in 2005.
10Basel I Implementation
- India adopted Basel I in a phased manner from
1992 onwards - India stipulated the capital to risk weighted
asset ratio of 9.0 as against international
norms of 8 and a Tier I capital ratio of 6. - Capital charge for market risk in line with
market risk amendment of 1996 to the Basel I
accord was adopted in 2005.
11Basel II Implementation
- Implementation of Basel II in India has been in
a phased and calibrated manner - All commercial banks in India have migrated to
Basel II as on March 31, 2009 - To begin with, India has adopted the basic /
standardised approaches of Basel II. - RBI has also been preparing simultaneously for
introducing advanced approaches for those banks
which have sophisticated risk management structure
12Basel II
Pillar 1 Minimum Capital Requirement
Pillar 2 Supervisory Review
Pillar 3 Market Discipline
Capital for Credit Risk (SA FIRB AIRB)
Capital for Market Risk (SMA SDA IMA)
Capital for Operational Risk (BIA SA AMA)
13Capital
- The current global financial turmoil has brought
to sharp focus the role of capital regulations in
promoting financial stability and mitigating
procyclicality - Capital should serve as an effective buffer to
absorb losses over the cycle, so as to protect
both the solvency of financial institutions in
the event of losses, and their ability to lend. -
14Capital
- The recent London Summit by G 20 has articulated
certain action points on capital regulation - G20 Leaders should support the progressive
adoption of the Basel II capital framework, which
will continue to be improved on an ongoing basis,
across the G20.
15Capital
- In this context, the BCBS should develop
standards to promote the build-up of capital
buffers in good times that can be drawn down in
periods of stress. The BCBS should also
complement risk-based capital measures with
simpler indicators to monitor the build-up of
leverage. - The international standard for the minimum level
of capital should remain unchanged until the
financial system has recovered. -
16Good Information Flow
- Underestimation of risk and the consequential
underpricing of risk are attributed as major
factors for the present crisis. - Since Basel II attempts to build a more risk
sensitive framework for capital regulation it is
essential that the information flow is designed
to be timely and accurate
17Challenges in Basel II Implementation- Basic/
Standardised approaches Reporting issues
- The implementation of Basel II has thrown up
several challenges due to its requirement of
timely receipt of information from banks in a
standardised and transparent format and at the
disaggregated level. - One of the challenges is upgradation of bank-wide
information system through better branch
connectivity within banks and then integrating
this with the regulatory reporting - Under Pillar II of Basel II, RBI has to ensure
that banks assess accurately all the risks they
are exposed to and accurately determine the
capital they need to have in commensurate with
their risk profile
18Challenges in Basel II Implementation- Basic/
Standardised approaches Reporting issues
(contd..)
- Under Pillar III (Market Discipline) of Basel II
suitable disclosures have to be made by the banks
so as to enable the market participants to take
informed decisions - RBI has been monitoring banks exposure to
certain sensitive sectors with a view to
ensuring prescription of appropriate risk weight - RBI has been in a calibrated manner revising
risk weights and provisioning relating to
sensitive sectors with the objective of ensuring
asset growth with minimum volatility.
19Challenges in Basel II Implementation- Basic/
Standardised approaches Reporting issues
- Basel II implementation thus requires quicker,
quantitative and qualitative analysis of
financial information by the regulator so that
banks can be monitored closely vis-a-vis Basel
II guidelines and certain corrective policy
measures be taken - These requirements of efficient, standardised and
transparent reporting system which facilitates
accurate and reliable extraction of data led RBI
to introduce XBRL reporting system for Basel II
reports from banks
20Challenges in Basel II Implementation- Advanced
Approaches Reporting issues
- The Basel II framework also offers multiple
options of increasing sophistication for
computing capital requirements for the three
major categories of risks. - While for the present, banks are required to
adopt the relatively simpler approaches available
under the framework, RBI may permit few banks to
migrate to advanced approaches - A draft time frame for the purpose has been drawn
up - Implementation of advanced approaches would
require tremendous data processing at the bank
level and RBI
21Challenges in Basel II Implementation- Advanced
Approaches Reporting issues
- The requirement of maintaining long time series
data, processing it and modelling several
variables would throw up several issues of
reporting within the banks -
- The requirement of assessing the data quality of
the banks and validating the models of the banks
will be dependent on real time and seamless
information flow between banks and RBI. - The XBRL project would be critical in this
regard.
22Fast Track XBRL
23Approach
- High Level Steering Committee
- Involvement of banks
- Interaction with international institutions
Europe, Japan, Australia - Learning from best practices in other central
banks Bank of Spain - Working closely with external consultants
- Moving the other stakeholders in India
24Basel IIReporting
- As directed by the High Level Steering Committee,
the Capital Adequacy Return (RCA 2), based on the
Basel II norms has been taken up first - A 2- stage approach
- An Excel Based Report preparation Tool
- A web portal for
- Submission of Returns by the Banks
- Viewing Bank Returns and MIS Reports by RBI
- A Dimensional XBRL Taxonomy sits on top of both
these applications
25System Overview and Dataflow
26RCA 2 Taxonomy Overview
- Taxonomy tailored to Basel II Reporting
Requirements - XBRL 2.1 and Dimensional Specification Compliant
- Taxonomy Architecture along COREP lines
- Multi dimensional in nature and template based
information capture
27(No Transcript)
28Template Based Data Capture
Modules Templates
Capital requirements 2
Credit risk exposure 9
Market risk exposure 4
Operational risk exposure 1
29Elements
Total 425
Primary Elements 128
Dimensions 29
Domain Members 253
Hypercube 15
30Taxonomy Structure
31Advantages to RBI
- At RBIs end, following facilities/advantages
- generating standard and ad-hoc reports as
required - maximum possible automation of processes
- more analysis facilitated since less of data
related issues expected - ease of incorporating data for various
analytical studies and periodic reports - Quicker access to bank analysts and inspection
officials - Provision for automated signalling of red flags
in submitted data which would need further
analysis - Access of the centralized data repository by
other departments like banking policy department,
monetary policy department, financial markets
department etc. as required - Use of business intelligence tool for advanced
analytics and drill-down/roll up facility
32Future Roadmap
33Implementation Strategy
- Phased Approach
- In Phase I, Basel II reporting implemented
- International Seminar coinciding with launch
- Sec 42 Return under ORFS being brought to XBRL
standards - Taxonomies for Annual Accounts being developed
34Taxonomy Development
- Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
(ICAI) has been working towards - Formation of XBRL-India jurisdiction
- Development of Taxonomies
- Taxonomies for CI already developed yet to be
implemented - Banking taxonomies getting developed
- RBI and ICAI are working closely
35ICAI Taxonomy Structure
- Industry-based classification
- Commercial and Industrial companies
- Banking companies
- Non-Banking Financial companies
- Core Schema
- Exhaustive list of all element declarations
- Common elements defined once
- Distinct extended links for each industry
36Approach
- Designing general banking taxonomy in accordance
with the CI taxonomy - Based on IFRS 2006
- No dimensions
- RBI can use the banking taxonomy and extend it to
include dimensional structure - FINREP structure
37IFRS 2006 Vs. IFRS 2008
IFRS 2006 IFRS 2008
Release date 15th August 2006 24th June 2008
Modularity The files (Schema and linkbases) are located in one folder. The files are organized based on the IAS and IFRS. There is a core schema containing all the elements defined, and linkages to the different folders for every IAS and IFRS.
Structure There was a common entry point, wherein the users had to select and browse the taxonomy. The entry point is entity specific and hence has to be created by the user of the taxonomy.
Elements i) 4100 (approx) i) 2700 (approx)
ii) Elements outside the IAS and IFRS (common practices and industry specific) are included in the taxonomy ii) Elements only from the IAS and IFRS are part of taxonomy
Dimension Vs. Tuples Tuples are used in the taxonomy Dimensions have been included in the taxonomy
38Data model Issues
- Notes to accounts information is largely tabular
and therefore is - Multi-dimensional data
- Data points having similar attributes
- IFRS 2006 Does not use dimension
- IFRS 2008 Includes dimensions
39Key areas for dimensions (Notes)
- Repo transactions
- Composition of Non-SLR investments
- Exchange traded Interest Rate derivatives
- Risk exposure on Derivatives
- Maturity pattern of certain items of assets and
liabilities - Risk category wise country exposure
- Loan Assets subject to restructuring
- Segment reporting
- Related party disclosures
40Asset Liability Management
Maturity Deposits Advances Investments Borrowings Foreign Currency assets Foreign Currency liabilities
1 to 14 days
15 to 28 days
29 days to 3 months
Over 3 months up to 6 months
Over 6 months up to 1 year
Over 1 year up to 3 years
Over 3 years up to 5 years
Over 5 years
Total
PRIMARY ELEMENTS
D I M E N S I O N
41Target
- Based on IFRS 2006
- Banking specific tags have been defined
additionally in the core schema - Separate extended links for the bank reporting
appended to existing taxonomy - Basic structure of financial statements and their
details, both included in the same extended link
(unlike CI) - No dimensions have been defined, instead extended
links have been used - Implement the system for March 2010 reporting
42- Your
- Comments
- and
- Suggestions
- Please
- . . .
- asramasastri_at_rbi.org.in
- prravimohan_at_rbi.org.in