Capital Adequacy

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Capital Adequacy

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Title: Capital Adequacy


1
  • Chapter 20
  • Capital Adequacy

2
Overview
  • This chapter discusses the functions of capital,
    different measures of capital adequacy, current
    and proposed capital adequacy requirements and
    advanced approaches used to calculate adequate
    capital according to internal rating based models
    of credit risk.

3
Importance of Capital Adequacy
  • Absorb unanticipated losses and preserve
    confidence in the FI
  • Protect uninsured depositors and other
    stakeholders
  • Protect FI insurance funds and taxpayers
  • Protect FI owners against increases in insurance
    premiums
  • To acquire real investments in order to provide
    financial services

4
Capital and Insolvency Risk
  • Capital
  • net worth
  • The economic definition of capital is the
    difference between the market value of assets and
    the market value of liabilities.
  • book value
  • The book value definition of capital is the value
    of assets minus liabilities as found on the
    balance sheet. This amount often is referred to
    as accounting net worth.
  • Market value of capital
  • credit risk
  • interest rate risk
  • mark-to-market for banks securities losses

5
Capital and Insolvency Risk
  • How does economic value accounting recognize the
    adverse effects of credit and interest rate risk?
  • The loss in value caused by credit risk and
    interest rate risk is borne first by the equity
    holders, and then by the liability holders. In
    market value accounting, the adjustments to
    equity value are made simultaneously as the
    losses due to these risk elements occur. Thus
    economic insolvency may be revealed before
    accounting value insolvency occurs.
  • How does book value accounting recognize the
    adverse effects of credit and interest rate risk?
  • Because book value accounting recognizes the
    value of assets and liabilities at the time they
    were placed on the books or incurred by the firm,
    losses are not recognized until the assets are
    sold or regulatory requirements force the firm to
    make balance sheet accounting adjustments. In
    the case of credit risk, these adjustments
    usually occur after all attempts to collect or
    restructure the loans have occurred. In the case
    of interest rate risk, the change in interest
    rates will not affect the recognized accounting
    value of the assets or the liabilities.

6
Example (P. 547 8)
  • State Bank has the following year-end balance
    sheet (in millions)
  •  
  • Assets Liabilities and Equity
  • Cash 10 Deposits 90
  • Loans 90 Equity 10
  • Total Assets100 Total Liabilities
    Equity 100
  •  
  • The loans primarily are fixed-rate, medium-term
    loans, while the deposits are either short-term
    or variable-rate. Rising interest rates have
    caused the failure of a key industrial company,
    and as a result, three percent of the loans are
    considered to be uncollectable and thus have no
    economic value. One-third of these uncollectable
    loans will be charged off. Further, the increase
    in interest rates has caused a 5 percent decrease
    in the market value of the remaining loans. What
    is the impact on the balance sheet after the
    necessary adjustments are made according to?

7
Example (P. 547 8)
  • Under book value accounting, the only adjustment
    is to charge off 1 percent of the loans. Thus
    the loan portfolio will decrease by 0.90 and a
    corresponding adjustment will occur in the equity
    account. The new book value of equity will be
    9.10. We assume no tax affects since the tax
    rate is not given.
  • Under market value accounting, the 3 percent
    decrease in loan value will be recognized, as
    will the 5 percent decrease in market value of
    the remaining loans. Thus equity will decrease
    by 0.03 x 90 0.05 x 90(1 0.03) 7.065.
    The new market value of equity will be 2.935.
  • The new market to book value ratio is
    2.935/9.10 0.3225.

8
Capital and Insolvency Risk (continued)
  • Book value of capital
  • par value of shares
  • surplus value of shares
  • retained earnings
  • loan loss reserve
  • A special reserve set aside out of retained
    earnings to meet expected and actual losses on
    the portfolio.
  • Loan loss reserve reflect an estimate by the FIs
    management of the losses in the loan portfolio.

9
Discrepancy Between Market and Book Values
  • Factors underlying discrepancies
  • interest rate volatility
  • examination and enforcement
  • Market value accounting
  • market to book
  • Market values produce a more accurate picture of
    the banks current financial position for both
    stockholders and regulators. Stockholders can
    more easily see the effects of changes in
    interest rates on the banks equity, and they can
    evaluate more clearly the liquidation value of a
    distressed bank.
  • arguments against market value accounting
  • Among the arguments against market value
    accounting are that market values sometimes are
    difficult to estimate, particularly for small
    banks with non-traded assets. This argument is
    countered by the increasing use of asset
    securitization as a means to determine value of
    even thinly traded assets.
  • In addition, some argue that market value
    accounting can produce higher volatility in the
    earnings of banks.
  • Unrealized capital gains and losses
  • A significant issue in this regard is that
    regulators may close a bank too quickly under the
    prompt corrective action requirements of FDICIA.

10
Arguments against Market Value Accounting
  • Among the arguments against market value
    accounting are that market values sometimes are
    difficult to estimate, particularly for small
    banks with non-traded assets.
  • This argument is countered by the increasing use
    of asset securitization as a means to determine
    value of even thinly traded assets.
  • In addition, some argue that market value
    accounting can produce higher volatility in the
    earnings of banks.
  • Unrealized capital gains and losses
  • A significant issue in this regard is that
    regulators may close a bank too quickly under the
    prompt corrective action requirements of FDICIA.
  • FIs are less willing to accept longer-term asset
    exposure.
  • Interfere with FIs special functions.

11
Capital Adequacy in Commercial Banks and Thrifts
  • Actual capital rules
  • Capital-assets ratio (Leverage ratio)
  • L Core capital/Assets
  • Where core capital is book value of equity plus
    qualifying cumulative perpetual preferred stock
    plus minority interests in equity accounts of
    consolidated subsidiaries.
  • 5 target zones associated with set of mandatory
    and discretionary actions
  • Prompt corrective action
  • The prompt corrective action provision requires
    regulators to appoint a receiver for the bank
    when the leverage ratio falls below 2 percent.
    Thus even though the bank is technically not
    insolvent in terms of book value of equity, the
    institution can be placed into receivorship.

12
Leverage Ratio
  • Problems with leverage ratio
  • Market value may not be adequately reflected by
    leverage ratio
  • closing a bank when the leverage ratio falls
    below 2 percent does not guarantee that the
    depositors are adequately protected. In many
    cases of financial distress, the actual market
    value of equity is significantly negative by the
    time the leverage ratio reaches 2 percent.
  • Asset risk ratio fails to reflect differences in
    credit and interest rate risks
  • Off-balance-sheet activities escape capital
    requirements in spite of attendant risks

13
Basel Agreement
  • The Basel Agreement identifies the risk-based
    capital ratios agreed upon by the member
    countries of the Bank for International
    Settlements.
  • The major feature of the 1988 Basle Agreement is
    that the capital of banks must be measured as an
    average of credit-risk-adjusted total assets both
    on and off the balance sheet.
  • The 1993 Basel Agreement explicitly incorporated
    the different credit risks of assets into capital
    adequacy measures.
  • This was followed with a revision in 1998 in
    which market risk was incorporated into
    risk-based capital.
  • In 2001, the BIS issued a Consultative Document,
    The New Basel Capital Accord, that proposed the
    incorporation (effective in2006) of operational
    risk into capital requirements and updated the
    credit risk assessments in the 1993 agreement.

14
New Basel Accord (Basel II)
  • Pillar 1 Credit, market, and operational risks
  • Credit risk
  • Standardized approach
  • Internal Rating Based (IRB)
  • Market Risk Unchanged
  • Operational
  • Basic Indicator
  • Standardized
  • Advanced Measurement Approaches

15
Basel II continued
  • Pillar 2
  • Specifies importance of regulatory review
  • Pillar 3
  • Specifies detailed guidance on disclosure of
    capital structure, risk exposure and capital
    adequacy of banks

16
Risk-based Capital Ratios
  • Basle I Agreement
  • Enforced alongside traditional leverage ratio
  • Minimum requirement of 8 total capital (Tier I
    core plus Tier II supplementary capital) to
    risk-adjusted assets ratio.
  • Also requires, Tier I (core) capital ratio
  • Core capital (Tier I) / Risk-adjusted ?
    4.
  • Crudely mark to market on- and off-balance sheet
    positions.

17
Calculating Risk-based Capital Ratios
  • Tier I includes
  • book value of common equity, plus perpetual
    preferred stock, plus minority interests of the
    bank held in subsidiaries, minus goodwill.
  • Tier II includes
  • loan loss reserves (up to maximum of 1.25 of
    risk-adjusted assets) plus various convertible
    and subordinated debt instruments with maximum
    caps

18
Calculating Risk-based Capital Ratios
  • Credit risk-adjusted assets
  • Risk-adjusted assets Risk-adjusted
    on-balance-sheet assets Risk-adjusted
    off-balance-sheet assets
  • Risk-adjusted on-balance-sheet assets
  • Assets assigned to one of four categories of
    credit risk exposure.
  • Category 1(0 weight) includes cash, United
    States Treasury bills, notes and bonds,
    mortgage-backed securities, and Federal Reserve
    Bank balances.
  • Category 2 (20 weight) includes U.S.
    agency-backed securities, municipal issued
    general obligation bonds, FHLMC and FNMA
    mortgage-backed securities, and interbank
    deposits.
  • Category 3 (50 weight) includes other municipal
    revenue bonds and regular residential mortgage
    loans.
  • All other commercial, consumer, and credit card
    loans, real assets and any other asset not
    included above are included in category 4 (100
    weight).
  • Risk-adjusted value of on-balance-sheet assets
    equals the weighted sum of the book values of the
    assets, where weights correspond to the risk
    category.

19
Calculating Risk-based Capital Ratios under
Basel II
  • Basel I criticized since individual risk weights
    depend on broad borrower categories
  • All corporate borrowers in 100 risk category
  • Basel II widens differentiation of credit risks
  • Refined to incorporate credit rating agency
    assessments

20
Risk Categories (Table 20-12)
  • Basel II attempts to align capital requirements
    more closely with the banking risk of the FI. In
    addition to the above classifications, the Basel
    II categories include the following
  • Category 1 (0 weight) Loans to sovereigns with
    an SP rating of AA- or better.
  • Category 2 (20 weight) Loans to sovereigns with
    an SP rating between A- and A inclusive, and
    loans to banks and corporates with an SP rating
    of AA- or better.
  • Category 3 (50 weight) Loans to sovereigns with
    an SP rating between BBB- and BBB inclusive,
    and loans to banks and corporates with an SP
    rating between AA- and A inclusive.
  • Category 4 (100 weight) Loans to sovereigns
    with an SP rating of B- to BB. Loans to banks
    with an SP rating of B- to BBB. Loans to
    corporates with a credit rating of BB- to BBB.
  • Category 5 (150 weight) This is a new category
    introduced by Basel II. Loans to sovereigns,
    banks, and securities firms with an SP credit
    rating below B-. Loans to corporates with a
    credit rating below BB-.

21
Example (P.548, 20)
  • National Bank has the following balance sheet (in
    millions) and has no off-balance-sheet
    activities
  • Assets Liabilities and Equity
  • Cash 20 Deposits 980
  • Treasury bills 40 Subordinated debentures 40
  • Residential mortgages 600 Common stock 40
  • Other loans 430 Retained earnings 30
  • Total Assets 1,090 Total Liabilities and
    Equity1,090
  • The leverage ratio is (40 30)/1,090
    0.06422 or 6.422 percent
  • Risk-adjusted assets 20x0.0 40x0.0
    600x0.5 430x1.0 730.
  • Tier I capital ratio (40 30)/730 0.09589
    or 9.59 percent
  • The total risk-based capital ratio (40 40
    30)/730 0.150685 or 15.07 percent.
  • The bank would be place in the well-capitalized
    category.

22
Risk-adjusted Off-balance-sheet Activities
  • Two-step process
  • The first step is to convert the
    off-balance-sheet items to credit equivalent
    amounts of an on-balance-sheet item by
    multiplying the notional amounts by an
    appropriate conversion factor as given in Table
    20-14.
  • Conversion factors used depend on the guaranty
    type.
  • Sale and repurchase agreements and assets sold
    with recourse(100)
  • Direct credit substitute Standby LC (100)
  • Performance-related standby LC (50)
  • Unused portion of loan commitments with maturity
    of more than one year (50)
  • Commercial LC (20)
  • Banker acceptance conveyed (20)
  • Other loan commitment with one year or less to
    maturity(0) (20 in2006)
  • Multiply credit equivalent amounts by appropriate
    risk weights (dependent on underlying
    counterparty), see table 20-12.

23
Risk-adjusted Off-balance-sheet Activities
  • Off-balance-sheet market contracts or derivative
    instruments
  • Issue is counterparty credit risk
  • Counterparty credit risk is the risk that the
    other party in a contract may default on their
    payment obligations.
  • Basically a two-step process
  • Conversion factor used to convert to credit
    equivalent amounts.
  • Credit equivalent amount of OBS derivative
    security items Potential exposure Current
    exposure
  • The potential exposure is the portion of the
    credit equivalent amount that would be at risk if
    the counterparty to the contract defaulted in the
    future. The current exposure is the cost of
    replacing the contract if the counterparty
    defaulted today.
  • Second, multiply credit equivalent amounts by
    appropriate risk weights.
  • Risk-adjusted asset value of OBS market contracts
    Total credit equivalent amount risk
    weight(0.5 in Basel I 1.0 in Basel II).

24
Potential Exposure
  • Remaining Maturity Interest Rate
    Contracts Exchange Rate Contracts
  • Less than one year 0 1.0
  • One to five years 0.5 5.0
  • Over five years 1.5 7.5
  • The credit conversion factors for the potential
    exposure of foreign exchange contracts are
    greater than they are for interest rate contracts
    because research indicates that foreign exchange
    rates are more volatile than interest rates.

25
Current Exposure
  • This reflects the cost of replacing a contract if
    a counterparty defaults today.
  • The bank calculates this replacement cost or
    current exposure by replacing the rate or price
    initially in the contract with the current rate
    or price for a similar contract and recalculates
    all the current and future cash flows that would
    have been generated under current rate or price
    terms. The bank discounts any future cash flows
    to give a current present value measure of the
    contracts replacement cost.
  • If the contracts replacement cost is negative,
    regulations require the replacement cost to be
    set to zero.
  • If the replacement cost is positive, this value
    is used as the measure of current exposure.

26
Risk-adjusted Asset Value of OBS Derivatives With
Netting
  • A large commercial bank may have exposure from
    many derivative contracts at any given time, and
    thus it may be desirable to net or combine the
    various positive and negative exposures to
    determine one total net exposure. The Fed allows
    this netting or combining of exposures under the
    condition that the bank has a bilateral netting
    contract that clearly establishes a legal
    obligation by the counterparty to pay or receive
    a single net amount on the contracts. The bank
    must estimate the net current exposure and the
    net potential exposure of the positions included
    in the bilateral netting contract.
  •  

27
Risk-adjusted Asset Value of OBS Derivatives With
Netting
  • The net current exposure is the net sum of all
    positive and negative replacement costs.
  • If the sum is positive, then net current exposure
    equals the sum.
  • If negative, net current exposure equals zero.
  • The net potential exposure is determined by
    calculating a weighted average of the sum of the
    potential exposures of each contract and the
    product of the sum of the potential exposures
    multiplied times the ratio of the net current
    exposure to gross current exposure (NGR). The
    weights are 0.4 and 0.6 respectively.
  • Anet (0.4 Agross ) (0.6 NGR Agross )

28
Example 20-4
  • Amount Conversion Potential
    Replace Current Credit
  • factor exposure cost Exposure Equivalent
  • Amount
  • 4-year fixed
  • Floating interest
  • Rate swap 100m .005 .5m 3m 3m 3.5m
  • Two-year forward
  • Foreign exchange
  • Contract 40m .05 2m -1m 0 2m
  • Credit risk-adjusted asset value of OBS
    derivatives5.5 million0.52.75million
  • Agross2.5m Net current exposure2m Current
    exposure3m
  • Anet (0.4 Agross ) (0.6 NGR Agross )
  • NGRNet current exposure/current exposure2/3
  • Anet (0.4 2.5m) (0.6 2/3 2.5m )2m
  • Total credit equivalentnet potential
    exposurenet current exposure
  • 2m2m4 million
  • Credit risk-adjusted asset value of OBS
    derivatives4 million0.52 million
  • Netting reduces the credit risk-adjusted asset
    value from 2.75 m to 2 m.

29
Interest Rate Risk, Market Risk, and Risk-based
Capital
  • Risk-based capital ratio is adequate as long as
    the bank is not exposed to
  • undue interest rate risk
  • No formal add-on has been required for
    interest-rate risk.
  • market risk
  • To calculate an add-on to the 8 percent
    risk-based capital ratio to reflect their
    exposure to market risk.

30
Operational Risk and Risk-Based Capital
  • 2001 Proposed amendments
  • Add-on for operational risk
  • Increased visibility of operational risks in
    recent years has induced regulators to propose a
    separate capital requirement for credit and
    operational risks.
  • Basic Indicator Approach
  • Gross income Net interest Income Noninterest
    income
  • Operational capital ? Gross income
  • is set between 17 and 20 percent
  • Problems
  • Top-down.
  • Too aggregative and doest not differentiate at
    all among different areas.

31
Operational Risk and Risk-Based Capital
  • Standardized Approach
  • Eight major business units and lines of business
  • Capital charge computed by multiplying a weight,
    ?, for each line, by the indicator set for each
    line, then summing.
  • The ?s reflect the importance of each activity in
    the average bank.
  • The ?s are set by regulators and are calculated
    from average industry figures from a selected
    sample of banks.
  • The bank would add up the eight different
    operational capital requirements to get its total
    operational capital requirement.

32
BIS Standardized Approach Business Units and Lines
  • Business Line Indicator Capital Factors
  • Corporate finance Gross income ?1
  • Trading and sales Gross income ?2
  • Retail banking Gross income ?3
  • Commercial banking Gross income ?4
  • Payment and settlement Gross income ?5
  • Agency services and custody Gross income ?6
  • Retail brokerage Gross income ?7
  • Asset management Gross income ?8

33
Operational Risk and Risk-Based Capital
  • Advanced Measurement Approaches
  • To allow individual banks to rely on internal
    data for regulatory capital purposes. Three broad
    categories
  • Internal Measurement Approach (IMA)
  • Loss Distribution Approach (LDA)
  • Scorecard Approach (SA).

34
Criticisms of Risk-based Capital Ratio
  • Risk weight categories versus true credit risk.
  • Risk weights based on rating agencies
  • It is unclear whether the risk weights accurately
    measure the relative risk exposure of individual
    borrowers.
  • Rating agencies are often accused of lagging
    rather than leading the business cycles.
  • Portfolio aspects Ignores credit risk portfolio
    diversification opportunities.
  • No account is taken of the covariances among
    asset risks between different counterparties.
  • DI Specialness
  • May reduce incentives for banks to make loans.
  • Other risks Interest Rate, Foreign Exchange,
    Liquidity
  • Competition and differences in standards
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