Title: FINC 4320
1- FINC 4320
- Managing Bank Capital
- Fall 2004
2Tasks performed by bank capital
- Provides a cushion against risk of failure
- Promotes public confidence
- Provides funds for growth
- Regulator of growth
- Role in bank mergers
- Regulatory tool to limit risk exposure
- Protects the governments deposit insurance system
3What constitutes bank capital?
according to an accounting definition, capital
or net worth equals the cumulative value of
assets minus the cumulative value of liabilities,
and represents ownership interest in a firm.
- Other items
- Subordinated Debentures
- Minority Interest in Consolidated Subsidiaries
- Equity Commitment Notes
- Total Equity
- Common Stock
- Preferred Stock
- Surplus
- Undivided Profits
- Unrealized Gains
- Equity Reserves
4The Basle agreement
- In 1986, U.S. bank regulators proposed that U.S.
banks be required to maintain capital that
reflects the riskiness of bank assets. - By 1988, the proposal had grown to include
risk-based capital standards for banks in 12
industrialized nations according to the terms of
the Basle Agreement. - Regulations were fully in place by the end of
1992.
5Terms of the Basle Agreement
- Minimum capital requirement is linked to credit
risk as determined by the composition of assets. - Stockholders' equity is deemed to be the most
critical type of capital. - Minimum capital requirement increased to 8 for
total capital. - Capital requirements were approximately
standardized between countries to 'Level the
playing field.'
6Risk-based elements of the plan
- To determine minimum capital requirements, bank
managers follow a four-step process - Classify assets into one of four risk categories
- Classify off-balance sheet commitments and
guarantees into the appropriate risk categories
that is, compute credit-equivalent amount of each
off balance sheet item - Multiply the dollar amount of assets in each risk
category by the appropriate risk weight and sum -
this equals risk-weighted assets and - Multiply risk-weighted assets by the minimum
capital percentages, currently either 4 percent
or 8 percent.
7General descriptions of the four risk categories
8Regional National Bank (RNB), risk-based capital
9Regional National Bank (RNB), risk-based capital
10Regional National Bank (RNB), risk-based capital
11Tier 1 Capital
- Common stock and surplus
- Undivided profits
- Qualifying non-cumulative preferred stock
- minority interests in the equity accounts of
consolidated subsidiaries - Selected indentifiable intangible assets less
goodwill and other intangible assets
12Tier 2 Capital
- Allowance for loan and lease losses (up to 1.25
of RAA) - Subordinated debt capital instruments
- Mandatory convertible debt
- Intermediate-term preferred stock
- Cumulative perpetual preferred stock with unpaid
dividends - Equity notes
- Other long-term capital instruments that combine
debt and equity features
13Basle Agreement Capital Requirements
- Ratio of Tier 1 Capital to Risk-Weighted Assets
must be at least 4 percent - Ratio of Total Capital (Tier 1 Tier 2) to
Risk-Weighted Assets must be at least 8 percent - The amount of Tier 2 capital limited to 100
percent of Tier 1 Capital
14The Leverage Ratio
- Regulators are also concerned that a bank could
acquire so many low-risk assets that risk-based
capital requirements would be negligible, so they
have imposed an alternative minimum capital
level, defined as
15FDICIA and bank capital standards
- Effective December 1991, Congress passed the
Federal Deposit Insurance Improvement Act
(FDICIA) with the intent of revising bank capital
requirements to - emphasize the importance of capital and
- authorize early regulatory intervention in
problem institutions, and - authorized regulators to measure interest rate
risk at banks and require additional capital when
it is deemed excessive. - A focal point of the Act was the system of prompt
corrective actions, which divides banks into
categories or zones according to their capital
positions and mandates action when capital
minimums are not met.
16Capital categories under FDICA
17Prompt regulatory action under FDICIA
18Tier 3 capital requirements for market risk
- Many large banks have dramatically increased the
size and activity of their trading accounts,
resulting in greater exposure to market risk. - Market risk is the risk of loss to the bank from
fluctuations in interest rates, equity prices,
foreign exchange rates, commodity prices, and
exposure to specific risk associated with debt
and equity positions in the banks trading
portfolio. - Market risk exposure is, therefore, a function of
the volatility of these rates and prices and the
corresponding sensitivity of the banks trading
assets and liabilities.
19Tier 3 capital requirements for market risk
- In response to the FDICIA stipulation that
regulators systematically measure and monitor a
banks market risk position, risk-based capital
standards require all banks with significant
market risk to measure their market risk exposure
and hold sufficient capital to mitigate this
exposure. - A bank is subject to the market risk capital
guidelines if its consolidated trading activity,
defined as the sum of trading assets and
liabilities for the previous quarter, equals 10
percent or more of the banks total assets for
the previous quarter, or 1 billion or more in
total dollar value. - Banks subject to the market risk capital
guidelines must maintain an overall minimum 8
percent ratio of total qualifying capital to
risk-weighted assets and market risk equivalent
assets. - Tier 3 capital allocated for market risk plus
Tier 2 capital allocated for market risk are
limited to 71.4 percent of a banks measure for
market risk.
20Value-at-risk
- Market risk exposure is a function of the
volatility of rates and prices and the
corresponding sensitivity of the bank's trading
assets and liabilities. - The largest banks use a value-at-risk (VAR) based
capital charge, estimated by using an internally
generated risk measurement model.
21Weakness of the risk-based capital standards
- The current formal standards do not account for
any risks other than credit risk, except for
market risk at large banks with extensive trading
operations. - Although the new Basel II does account for
operational risk. - Book value of capital is not the most meaningful
measure of soundness. - It ignores changes in the market value of assets,
the value of unrealized gains or losses on
held-to-maturity bank investments, the value of a
bank charter, and the value of federal deposit
insurance. - Trading account securities must be
marked-to-market and unrealized gains and losses
reported on the income statement but other bank
assets and liabilities are generally listed at
book value - The contra asset account, Loan Loss Allowance, is
a crude measure of anticipated default losses but
does not generally take into account the change
in value of the loans from changes in interest
rates.
22Basle II
- Aims to correct the weaknesses of Basle I
- Three Pillars of Basle II
- Capital requirements for each bank are based on
their own estimated (credit, market, and
operational) risk exposure - Supervisory review of each banks risk assessment
procedures and the adequacy of its capital - Greater disclosure of each banks true financial
condition, to enhance market discipline
23Operational Risk
- is the risk of loss resulting from inadequate
or failed internal processes, people, and
systems, or from external events. - By 2005, a banks regulatory capital needs could
increase significantlyup to 20 percent of total
risk-based capitalas a result of its exposure to
operational risk.
24Functions of bank capital
- Provides a cushion for firms to absorb losses and
remain solvent. - Provides ready access to financial markets,
guards against liquidity problems. - Constrains growth and limits risk-taking, because
?TA / TA ?EQ / EQ
25Example
- Recall ?TA / TA ?EQ / EQ
- Assume ROA1.1, 7 equity, DR40
26The effect of capital requirements on bank
operating policies limiting growth
27(No Transcript)
28Planning to Meet a Banks Capital Needs
- Develop an Overall Financial Plan for Bank
- Determine Amount of Capital Appropriate for
Goals, Planned Service Offerings, Acceptable Risk
Exposure and Regulations - Determine Amount of Capital Which Can be
Generated Internally - Evaluate and Choose Source of Capital Best Suited
to Banks Needs and Goals
29Internal Capital Growth Rate
- Profit Margin Asset Utilization
- Equity Multiplier Retention Ratio