Title: PowerPoint bemutat
1Funding and Investment Policies for Deposit
Insurers
Presented by J.R. LaBrosse Secretary
General IADI
22 June 2004
2Funding
Objectives
Funding should ensure that
- adequate funds are readily available to reimburse
depositors promptly in the case of the failure of
one or more members (banks) - operating and administrative expenses of the
deposit insurer are covered
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3Funding
Sources of Funding
- Depositors (insurance fees)
- Banks
- Government (Public funding)
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4Funding
- Funding
- Liquidity support and/or funding of losses
- Levies
- Premiums
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5Funding
Premiums
- Collection of premiums from member banks can be
accomplished using one or a combination of two
methods - Ex-ante funding calculated and assessed each
year, regardless if losses/failures occur - Ex-post funding levied after a failure in order
to pay for losses/failures that have occurred in
order to replenish the insurers resources or
repay debt
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6Funding
Ex-ante Funding
- Accumulation of a reserve fund
- Prompt reimbursement of insured deposits
- Operating and administrative expenses
- Contribution from all banks including the
potentially failing ones - Smoothing the premium paid by banks over the
business cycle - Include prospective premiums in their financial
planning process
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7Funding
Difficulties of ex-ante funding
- Determining the size of the fund
- Implementing sound investment policies
- Setting investment objectives
- Determining the length of time to fund the
reserve - Balancing the level of premiums and the effect on
the liquidity of the banking system
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8Funding
Ex-post funding
- Member institutions have use of funds for
intermediation and their expenses are minimized - As long as there occur, is no failure, there is
no assessment against the banks - When failures premiums are charged to fund
deficits and losses
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9Funding
Difficulties of ex-post funding
- Requires access to liquidity support from
government or third party - Determining the level of losses and premiums
assessed when information may be inadequate - Charging high premiums difficult in an economic
slowdown - Possible weakened position by member
institutions' potential reluctance to cover
failure costs - Difficult to anticipate future assessments
- Failed institution doesn't pay for the deposit
insurance
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10Funding
Hybrid Funding Method
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11Funding
- In an ex-ante system, a deposit insurer has two
premium assessment options - Flat-rate system
- Risk-adjusted differential premium system (RADP)
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12Funding - Flat-rate
Flat-rate system
- Advantage easy to calculate and administer
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13Funding - Flat-rate
Flat-rate system
- Disadvantages
- low-risk members pay for part of the deposit
insurance benefit enjoyed by high-risk members - banks can increase the risk profile of their
portfolios without incurring additional deposit
insurance costs - Flat-rate systems are usually adopted by newly
established deposit insurance systems
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14Funding - RADP
Differential Premiums
- Advantage
- financial incentives to reduce risks
- contributes to fair play
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15Funding - RADP
Differential Premiums
- Disadvantage
- appropriate/acceptable methods of differentiating
bank risk - obtaining reliable and timely data
- ensuring rating criteria is transparent
- potential destabilizing effect of imposing high
premiums on troubled banks
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16Funding
Other issues to be addressed
- Nature of the assessment basis insured deposits
or total deposits - Frequency of assessments
- Frequency of the collection of premiums
- Non payment of premiums due
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17Funding
Other Funding Issues
- Start up or initial funding needs
- One-off admission fee from banks
- Supplementing funding during a wave of failures
- Guarantees to support private borrowing by the
deposit insurer
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18Funding
Issues
- Two approaches to the Establishment of a Deposit
Insurance Fund - Long-term premium rate
- provides a steady stream of funds over the
long-term - must match the funding needs of the deposit
insurer and the capacity of member institution to
pay
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19Funding
Premium rates tied to a target fund ratio
(e.g. deposit insurance fund)
- issue of the optimal size for the fund
- depends on the structures of member institutions
- needs adequate data to support
- loss against default experience
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20Funding
Premium rates tied to a target fund ratio
(e.g. deposit insurance fund)
- After the targeted ratio is reached
- premium holidays
- pay-as-you-go system
- assessment rate based on inherent risk exposure
- premium rebates
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21Summing Up
- Formal funding is crucial to the efficiency of a
deposit insurance system and the maintenance of
public confidence - It is important to have funding alternatives
(hybrid system) - Funding for liquidity or losses
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22Factors to consider in Devising Investment
Policies for Deposit Insurers
23Responsibilities of Management
- Setting out a policy
- Determining risk tolerances
24Governance framework
- Processes
- Will the function be outsourced?
- Decision making
- Reporting
25CDICs experience with risk tolerances
26 27 28Policy Considerations
- Determining the purpose of the portfolio
will lead to an understanding of the risk
tolerance that can be accepted by
management
29 30Determining risk tolerances of the investment
portfolio
31Risk tolerance conclusions
32Evolution of CDICs investment policy
33 34- Investment policy limitations
-
- Credit risk
- Counterparty risk
- Maturity Profile
- Liquidity Risk by Issuer, and
- Portfolio Liquidity Risk
35 36(No Transcript)