Title: Basel 2: Current Status
1Basel 2 Current Status
- Phil Rogers, HSBC Bank Credit and Risk
- 25 July 2006
2What is Basel 2?
- A more risk sensitive, method of assessing the
capital adequacy of financial institutions.. - which encourages banks to develop more
sophisticated credit and operational risk
management techniques - whilst preserving the overall level of capital in
the banking system
33 Pillars
- Pillar One Minimum Capital Requirements.
(Bottom up) - Pillar Two Supervisory Review Process. (Top
down) - Pillar Three Market Discipline (Public
Disclosure)
43 Types of Risk will Require Capital
- Credit Risk. Far more sophisticated approach
than current Basel 1 Accord - Operational Risk. New capital charge
- Market Risk. Modified version of current rules.
Defined by the Trading Book Review, 2005
5Legal Framework
- The BIS Framework Document, published July 2005,
known as Basel 2, is an agreement of Central
Bankers only. It has no legal status - In the EU the legal authority derives from the
Capital Requirements Directive (CRD), September
2005 - not identical with Basel 2 - In the UK the Rules are implemented by the FSA
Prudential Source Book (BIPRU) - not identical
with CRD
63 Approaches to Credit Risk
- Standardised Approach (SA), a modified version of
Basel 1. Generally regarded as suitable only for
smaller banks - Foundation Internal Ratings Based Approach
(FIRBA) - Advanced Internal Ratings Based Approach (AIRBA)
73 Approaches to Operational Risk
- Basic Indicator (capital based on 15 of income).
Suitable only for smaller banks - Standardised (capital based on 12 to 18 of
income depending on risk of individual business
lines) - Advanced Measurement (capital assessed using the
Banks operational risk models)
8Timings for Credit Approaches
- Standardised Approach and Foundation IRB
Approach From 1 January 2007. Must be in place
by 1 January 2008 - Advanced IRB Approach From 1 January 2008
- IRB Approaches have experience requirements for
the use of ratings and a 1 year parallel run - US has delayed until 2009 at the earliest, but
delay in the EU considered unlikely
9Basel 2 Credit Parameters
- Probability of Default (PD)
- How likely is it that the customer will default
in a 12 month period? - Exposure at Default (EAD)
- What will exposure to the customer be at default?
- Loss Given Default (LGD)
- How much of the exposure at default will be lost?
10IRB Foundation re Advanced
- For Foundation IRB banks estimate only PD for
non-retail exposures. EAD and LGD are set by the
regulators. For retail exposures banks estimate
all 3 parameters - For Advanced IRB banks estimate PD, LGD and EAD
- Advanced is, therefore, more costly, more complex
and subject to higher quality standards but - It is intended that there should be capital
incentives for banks to adopt more comprehensive
and accurate measures of risk
11Credit Risk associated with an exposure is a
function of the characteristics of both borrower
and facility
Credit Risk of Transaction
Borrower characteristics
Facility characteristics
How much exposure do you have to this facility?
What would you expect to lose on this facility if
the customer defaults?
Who are you lending to?
Probability of Default (PD - )
Exposure at Default (EAD - )
Loss Given Default (LGD - )
12Expected Loss
- Long run average of losses in a portfolio
- Analysis should be based on at least one full
economic cycle (but most UK banks do not have the
data) - Is not part of capital calculation, but is a cost
to the business. - Is expected by Basel 2 to be covered by
provisions. Any difference between EL and
provisions must be explained and a capital
adjustment may be necessary
13Components of Expected Loss
- 12 month Probability of Default (PD)
- Loss Given Default (LGD)
- Exposure at Default (EAD)
- PD x LGD x EAD Expected Loss
14Examples of Expected Loss
Expected Loss () / ()
Probability of Default ()
Loss Given Default ()
Exposure at Default ()
x
x
PD - 0.07
LGD - 39.5
EAD - 2.8m
784 0.028
x
x
LGD - 24
470 0.017
x
x
LGD - 11
216 0.01
x
x
15Unexpected Loss
- Part of Regulatory and Economic Capital
Calculation - Is a function of PD, LGD, EAD plus Loss
Volatility - Level is determined by complex algorithms
- For Regulatory Capital algorithms are set by the
regulator
16Expected Unexpected Loss
Portfolio 1
Portfolio 2
Source Moodys KMV
17Examples of Basel 2 RWA and Capital Calculations
Maturity
PD ()
EAD ()
LGD ()
Credit Risk Basel II Formula
Maturity
EAD
PD
LGD
EL
RWA
Capital
2.5 Years
2.8m
7bp
39.5
784
599,977
47,998
24
470
359,986
28,799
11
216
164,994
13,199
1.2
39.5
13,440
2,451,210
196,097
24
8,064
1,470,726
117,658
11
3,696
674,083
53,927
Total Capital RWA8
18Outstanding Issues
- Downturn LGD/EAD. The Rules require estimates to
be based on downturn experience. UK data not
available for many portfolios. Uncertainty re
what will be acceptable - Governance. Draft FSA Rules require material
aspects of credit rating systems to be signed off
by a main Board member. Practicality under
discussion - Stress Testing. Draft FSA Rules require banks to
stress ratings for a 1 in 25 year event.
Practicality for large banking groups under
discussion with the FSA
19Outstanding Issues (2)
- Use Test. Banks are required to use Basel 2 risk
measures in their day to day business but the
level of conservatism required by the Regulators
creates challenges in some areas - Home/Host. Balance of responsibility between
home and host regulators not always clear,
especially outside EU. Implications of the US
delay not fully defined - Pillar 2. Practicalities of the Internal Capital
Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP) unclear
20Summary
- Banks and other financial institutions must move
to Basel 2 by 1 January 2008. Some will already
be parallel running - Higher quality business will attract more capital
than at present and vice versa - Many financial institutions are upgrading risk
management processes to meet the new demands - Some uncertainties but, in the EU at least, it
will happen