Title: NEW CAPITAL ACCORD
1NEW CAPITAL ACCORD
WWW.BIS.ORG
2Objectives of the revision
- Better assessment of capital adequacy in relation
to a banks true risk profile - Taking into account hedging strategies
- Coverage of credit, market and operational risk
- Portfolio diversification is taken into account
- Possible arbitrage of regulatory capital
requirements are tackled
3Applicability
- For internationally active banks and on a
consolidated basis on holding companies that are
parents of banking groups
4Difficulties
- National characteristics
- National accounting requirements
- National market conditions
- National loan loss provisions
5Structure of the new AccordThree pillars
- First pillar minimum capital requirement
- Second pillar supervisory review process
- Third pillar market discipline
6PILLAR 1Capital Adequacy
- Total
Capital - Capital ratio ----------------------------------
----------- - Credit risk Market risk
Operational risk
7Approaches
- Menu of approaches to measure credit risk
- Standardised Approach
- Foundation Internal Rating Based Approach
- Advanced Internal Rating Based Approach
- Menu of approaches to measure market risk
- Standardised Approach
- Internal Models Approach
- Menu of approaches to measure operational risk
- Basic Indicator Approach
- Standardised Approach
- Advance Measurement Approach
8Standardised Approach
9IRB approach
- Categorization of exposures
- Risk components
- Risk weight function
- Minimum requirements
10Categorization of exposures
- Corporate portfolio
- Retail portfolio
- Sovereign portfolio
- Bank portfolio
- Equity portfolio
- Project finance portfolio
- each portfolio subject to own methodology
11Credit risk components
- (PD) gt bank own assessment
- (LGD) gt foundation or advanced
- (EAD) gt foundation or advanced
- (M) gt foundation or advanced
12Minimum requirements for rating
- Meaningful differentiation of risk
- Completeness and integrity of rating assignments
- Oversight
- Criteria and orientation
- Estimation of PD
- Data collection and IT
- Use of internal rating
- Internal validation
- Disclosure
13PD estimation
- Own estimates (default experience, mapping
external data, external models) subject to - floor of 3 basis points (0.03)
- average PD for each borrower grade
- one year time horizon
- forward looking
14PD estimation
- Definition of default
- Default has occurred if one of the following
events has taken place - firm is unlikely to pay its debt obligations
- credit loss event associated with any obligation
of the firm - firm past due more than 90 days
- firm has filed for bankruptcy or similar
protection
15LGD estimation
- Foundation approach
- Claims without collateral ? LGD 50
- Subordinated claims without collateral
- ?
LDG 75 - Credit mitigation
16EAD estimation
- Foundation approach
- On balance sheet ? nominal amount
- Off balance sheet ? adjustments
- Transactions with uncertain future drawdown ?
100 drawn amount - 75
undrawn - OTC derivatives ? credit risk equivalent
17Risk weights estimation
- Foundation methodology
- RWcmin (LGD/50) x BRWc(PD) , 12.5 x LGD
- BRWc(PD)corporate benchmark risk weight
- associated with a given PD
18Risk weights versus PD
19Example
- Loan 100 E 100 E committed
- PD0.5
- LGD50
- then EAD175E
- risk weight (50/50)x7474
- or 12.5 x 50 625
- RWA 74 x 175 129,5 E
20Credit mitigation
- Recognized in
- Risk Weights in standardized approach
- PD estimation in IRB approach
- LGD estimation in IRB approach
21Credit mitigation techniques
- Collateral
- Netting
- Guarantees and credit derivatives
- Mismatched exposures
22Haircuts
- A haircut H will be applied to market value of
collateral in order to protect against price
volatility - A haircut is applied to all non-cash collaterals
- Adjusted value the value of the collateral
adjusted for the haircut(s) - Haircuts calculation supervisory, own estimates
23Haircuts
- Adjusted value CA
- C collateral value
- HE haircut for exposure
- HC haircut for collateral
- HFXhaircut for currency mismatch
24Asset securitisationThe concept
- Securitisation Assignment of market value to an
illiquid instrument - Securitisation Structural transaction in which
an institution transfers credit risk associated
with a specified pool of assets to a third party
(SPV)
25The concept
- Traditional securitisation legal or economic
transfer of assets or obligations to a third
party (SPV) that issues asset-backed securities
(ABS) that are claims against specific asset
pools. - Synthetic securitisation structured
transactions in which banks use credit
derivatives to transfer the credit risk of a
specified pool of assets to third parties.
26Traditional Securitisation
1.5 bn cash
BANK 1.5 bn credit portfolio
SPV
1.5 bn cash
Credit portfolio
1.5 bn notes
Y years notes
X years notes
27Synthetic Securitisation
1.5 bn cash
BANK 1.5 bn credit portfolio
SPV Holds portfolio of CLNs
1.5 bn cash
1.5 bn CLN issued by bank
1.5 bn notes
Y years notes
X years notes
28Credit derivatives
29Operational riskDefinition
- The risk of direct or indirect loss resulting
from inadequate or failed internal processes,
people and systems or from external events - Definition that focuses on the causes
- No strategic or reputational
30Basic Indicator Approach
- Capital a x Gross income
- a17-20 (provisional)
- Gross income Net interest income net
non-interest income
31Standardised Approach
- Bank activities are divided into standardised
business units and lines - For each business unit and line an indicator is
extracted to serve as a proxy for the amount of
operational risk and a beta factor for the
sensitivity
32Standardised Approach
33Standardised Approach
- K retail brokerage b retail brokerage x Gross
-
Income - Total Capital S K1-8
34PILLAR 2SUPERVISORY REVIEW PROCESS
- Four key principles
- Banks Own Assessment of Capital Adequacy
- Supervisory Review Process
- Capital Above Regulatory Minima
- Supervisory Intervention
35PILLAR 3Market Discipline
- the ability of the market to accurately assess
the condition of the bank - the ability of the market to cause subsequent
managerial actions to reflect those assessments