Title: Session II Regulatory Capital and Solvency Standards
1Session IIRegulatory Capital and Solvency
Standards
- Dr. Peter Kandl
- April 2, 2007
2Objectives
- To give an overview on regulatory standards in
the banking and insurance industry - To highlight the need for regulation
- To present the framework for calculating capital
and solvency requirements
3Financial Institutions Market Players
- Forms of financial institutions
- Commercial / Retail banks
- Hold customer deposits
- Extend credit to businesses, households and
governments - Securities houses
- Investment banks (initial sale of securities in
primary markets) - Broker-dealers (trading securities in secondary
markets) - Universal banks
- Combination of traditional banking and
securities activities - Insurance companies
- Property and casualty (PC) or life insurance
coverage - Reinsurance (Provide insurance coverage to
primary insurer)
4Systemic Risk
- Both commercial banks and securities houses play
role of intermediary - Facilitate payment flows across customers
- Maintain markets for financial instruments
- Systemic risk
- Risk of a sudden shock that would damage the
financial system - Involves contagious transmission of a shock
- Affects other firms
- Not limited to direct stakeholders
- Failure can be potentially harmful to the overall
financial system - Failure of a financial institution has
fundamentally different effects than failure of
an industrial corporation
5Sources of Systemic Risk
- Panicky behaviour of depositors or investors
- Bank run
- Depositors demand immediate return of their funds
- Liquidity and credit crunch
- Sudden drop in securities prices may lead to
margin calls - Forces leveraged investors to liquidate positions
at great cost - Interruptions in payment system
- Failure of one counterparty results in chain
reaction - Technological breakdown
6Regulation of Commercial Banks
- Deposit insurance (first established in 1933 in
the US) - Insurance fund protects investors if their bank
fails - Eliminates bank run
- Most countries have developed compulsory deposit
insurance program, but great variety across
countries concerning implementation - Some of financial risks is passed on to the
deposit insurance fund (I.e. government or
taxpayer) - Creates need for regulation of insured
institutions - Herstatt risk
- 1974 failure of Bankhaus Herstatt, an active
player in FX market - Bank shut down in noon, after having received DEM
- Counterparties never received their USD
- Serious liquidity squeeze for counterparties
- Shock for whole FX market
- Birth of Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
(BCBS)
7Regulations of Securities Houses
- Objectives (fundamentally different than for
commercial banks) - Protection of customers
- Rationale small investors are less capable of
informed investment decisions - Opportunistic behaviour by financial
intermediaries, antitrust legislation - Laws against trading on inside information
- Disclosure rules for other conflicts of interests
- Ensuring integrity of markets
- Stabilise financial markets
- Suitability standards, unsuitable recommendations
may constitute fraud (punishable by law)
8Regulations of Insurance Companies
- Objectives
- Protection of future benefits
- Rationale Event that triggers payment of
benefits may occur decades later than inception
date of contract - Claim amount often very high
- Insurance companies have been heavily regulated
(approval of tariffs and products) - Insurance protection fund
- Regulation practice
- Different across world / life insurance products
tight to social security system - Solvency I Prudential reservation rules instead
of strong Capital rules - Solvency II project harmonisation of regulatory
practice based on new solvency framework
9Balance sheets of financial intermediaries
Type Assets Liabilities
Banks (Retail) Loans, securities Deposits, CDs, subordinated debt
Securities firms Securities (long) Securities (short)
Insurance companies Market value of assets Actuarial value of insurance obligations ()
Pension funds Market value of assets Present value of defined-benefit pensions()
() depending on pension scheme
() claim / technical reserve
10Regulation of financial intermediaries
Type Main risk factors Purposes of regulatory capital
Banks Credit risk / Market risk / Operational risk Promote safety and soundness to financial system Protect deposit insurance fund
Securities firms Market risk / Liquidity risk / Operational risk Protect customers Protect integrity of securities market
Insurance firms (incl. pension funds) Market risk / Insurance risk / Operational risk Protect policyholder / claimants / retirees / (pension) insurance fund
11Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS)
- BCBS consists of central bankers from G-10()
countries, plus Luxemburg and Switzerland - BCBS is sub-committee under Bank for
International Settlements (BIS) - Setting (legally not binding) standards for
banking supervision (harmonization) in order to - Promote safety and soundness to global financial
system - Set level-playing field for global institutions
- Have minimum risk-based capital standards for
core institutions - Instituted minimum capital levels for
internationally active banks
() G-10 Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy,
Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, UK, USA
12Banking Supervision
- Financial institutions ultimately regulated by
their national supervisory authorities - USA
- Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
(FED) - Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC)
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
- United Kingdom
- Financial Services Authority (FSA)
- Switzerland
- Federal Banking Commission (FBC/EBK)
13Committee of European Banking Supervisors
- Established in Nov 2003, first meeting Jan 2004
- High level representatives from the banking
supervisory authorities and central banks of EU,
including Central European Bank - 27 countries, 46 member organisations
- Part of legal framework (has legal power) in EU,
- Challenges and tasks
- Ensure consistency in implementation of Basel II
in member states - Pursue convergence of supervisory practices
related to Basel II - Streamlining supervisory process for cross-border
groups (co-cooperation between home-host
authorities) - Effective consultations, enhance quality of
supervisory standards
14Insurance Supervision
- Global
- IAIS (International Association of Insurance
Supervisors) - Established in 1994
- Represents insurance regulators and supervisors
of some 180 jurisdictions - Issues global insurance principles, standards and
guidance paper - Promotes financial stability
- Europe
- CEIOPS (Committee of European Insurance and
Occupational Pension Supervision) - Same role as CEBS
- United Kingdom
- FSA
- Switzerland
- Federal Office of Private Insurance (FOPI / BPV)
- Finma (as of 2009 fusion of FBC and FOPI)
15Basel Accords
- 1988 Accord (Basel I)
- Risk-based capital charges for credit risk
(assets) - 1996 Amendment
- Incorporates market risk charge for trading book
and FX-risk CO-risk of banking book - Allows use of internal models
- Basel II
- More risk sensitive charges for credit risk
replaces partially 1988 accord - New capital requirements for operational risk
16Roadmap for the insurance industry (1/2)
- 1973 / 1979 First Non-Life / Life Directive
- Simple rule-based framework, establishment of
solvency margin - The solvency margin is the minimum amount of
extra capital that an insurance provider must
have to fall back on in unforeseen circumstances
17Roadmap for the insurance industry (2/2)
- Mid-1990s Third generation of life and non-life
Insurance Directives (Solvency I) - Establishment of a single market for insurance
(single passport system) - System relies on mutual recognition of the
supervision exercised by different national
authorities according to rules harmonised to the
extent necessary at the EU level - Since 2002 Solvency II (EU project)
- Principles on capital adequacy and solvency
(IAIS) (January 2002) - Framework made public in late 2005
implementation expected in 2011
18Principles of Basel II / Solvency II
- Based on three pillars
- Minimum capital / solvency requirements
- Rules (and / or principles) for calculating
capital / solvency requirements - Supervisory review
- Supervisory process to ensure fulfilment of
minimum capital / solvency requirements, adequate
internal processes ( governance structures,
soundness of internal control and risk management
systems) - Market discipline
- Disclosure of information to shareholders and
other stakeholders (incl. counterparties)
19Role of Capital
- Capital as buffer against unexpected losses
- Must be permanent
- Must allow for legal subordination (not preferred
in case of bankruptcy) - Goal absorb potential losses and thus avoiding
bankruptcy / insolvency - Broader definition than equity (recognition of
reserves, retained earnings, revaluation
reserves, hybrid debt, subordinated term debt) - Classification according to quality into Tier 1,
Tier 2 and Tier 3 capital (tiering of capital)
20Basel II Pillar I Framework
Banking book Trading book
Credit risk Banking assets
Credit risk All derivatives All derivatives
Market risk IR (informal) IR
Market risk EQ
Market risk FX FX
Market risk CO CO
Operational risk People, systems, processes People, systems, processes
21Basel II - Capital Requirements
- Capital adequacy measured as (simplified)
- Credit risk risk weighted assets
- Market / Operational risk risk charges x 12.5
- Well capitalized bank ratio ? 10
- Minimum regulatory standard of 8 corresponds
approximately to BBB rating
22Solvency II Framework / Structure
Valuation of Assets Liabilities
Required capital by risk type
Aggregation
Identification ofrisk absorbingelements
Market / ALM risk
Assets
Insurance risk
Gross Capital requirement
RequiredCapital
SCR
Liabilities
Credit risk
Risk Absorption
Diversification
Operational risk
- Recognise that certain liabilities canbe used
to absorb risks - Expected profits arisingfrom one year new
business subtracted
- Market consistent valuation of assets
liabilities - Option factored in
- Takes into accountrisk mitigation
andreinsurance - Allows for diversificationwithin risk types
- Considers certaincombinatorial risks
- Correlation andconcentration effectsacross risk
types
23Risk Based Solvency Regime
Economic Balance Sheet
Solvency Coverage Ratio (SCR)
Insurance liabilities (fair value /
bestestimate)
Risk bearing capital
gt 100
Required capital
Assets (at market or near market value)
- SCR lt 100 does not imply insolvency
- Introduction of intervention levels / ladders
SCR
green
Required capital
100
Increasinglevel of regulatory intervention
Risk bearing capital
yellow
80
orange
MCR
Free capital
30
red
Capitalrequirements
Risk bearing capital
MCR Minimum Coverage Ratio
24Menu of Approaches to Measure Risk (Basel II)
Risk Category Allowed Approach
Credit Standardized approach (based on the 1988 Accord) Foundation internal ratings-based approach Advanced internal ratings-based approach
Market Standardized approach Internal models approach
Operational Basic indicator approach Standardized approach Advanced measurement approach
25Credit Risk Charge Standardised Approach
- 8 of sum of risk-weighted assets
- Risk weights according to claim type and obligor
rating - External credit assessments for rating according
to - Recognition process
- Eligibility criteria
- Implementation considerations
- Recognition of credit risk mitigation techniques
- Collateralization (for unsecured loans /
haircuts) - On-balance sheet netting
- Guarantees and credit derivatives
26Credit Risk - Internal Approaches
- Internal ratings-based approach (IRB)
- Risk weight functions for corporate, sovereign,
bank, retail, and equity asset classes - Foundation approach
- Based on banks estimate of PD
- LGD, EAD and M (effective maturity) provided by
supervisor - Advanced approach
- Use of banks internal PD, LGD, EAD and M
estimates - Reliable process allowing to collect, store and
utilize loss statistics over time is required
27Market Risk - Approaches
- Two different approaches for calculation of
capital charges - Standardized method
- Set of rules and weights
- Internal models approach (IMA)
- Banks are allowed to use internal models to
determine capital requirements for market risk - Based on banks internal risk management system
- Strong system of verification
- Backtesting
28Operational Risk
- 3 different approaches, based on either
- Basic indicator approach
- 15 of average of positive annual gross income
over 3 previous years (aggregate measure of
business activity) - Does not account for controls
- Can be strongly misleading (e.g. the lower fees,
the smaller the capital charge) - Standardized method
- Similar to basic indicator approach, but uses
different multipliers for each out of 8
predefined lines of business - Total capital charge is 3-year average of sum of
annual business line charges (can be negative),
subject to floor of 0
29Operational Risk (contd)
- Advanced measurement approach (AMA)
- Banks can use their internal models, as long as
sufficiently comprehensive and systematic - Qualitative requirements regarding operational
risk function, involvement of management, risk
assessments, loss data analysis, monitoring,
reporting, documentation, reviews - Banks are allowed to recognise risk mitigant
effects of insurance (limited to 20 of total OR
charge)
30Key Elements of Swiss Solvency Test (SST)
Standard Models or Internal Models
Mix of predefined and company specific scenarios
Scenarios
Risk Models
Valuation Models
Market Risk
Market Value Assets
Credit Risk
Best Estimate Liabilities
Life (non BVG)
Life (BVG)
RM
Output of analytical models (Distribution)
Aggregation Method
Target Capital
SST Report
31Standard Models
PC Risk
Market Risk
Correlations btw risk factors (interest rates,
equity, FX, implied volatilities)
Small Claims (Gamma Distribution)
Premium Risk
Large Risk (Lognormal)
Insurance Risk
Catastrophes (Compound Poisson-Pareto)
Run-off Risk (Lognormal)
RiskMetrics type approach with 80 risk factors.
Sensitivities w.r.t. risk factors of both assets
and liabilities have to be determined
Life Risk
Credit Risk
Covariance approach for 8 risk factors
(mortality, morbidity,) Internal models have to
be used if substantial embedded options and
nonlinearities are in the books ? e.g.
replicating portfolios, market consistent
scenarios,
Basel II (standard, advanced or IRB)
recalibration to 99 TVaR. Spread risk treated
within the market risk model. Internal Models
(CR, KMV type,) Credit risk of default of
reinsurers is treated via a scenario
Scenarios
Historical financial market risk scenarios (Crash
of 2001/2002, Russia crisis,) Predefined
scenarios (pandemic, industrial accident, default
of reinsurers,) Company specific scenarios (at
least three, e.g. nuclear meltdown, earthquake in
Tokyo,). Scenarios have to describe impact of
events on all relevant risk factors (e.g.
Pandemic leads not only to excess mortality but
also to downturn of financial markets).
32Objectives banking regulation
Synopsis
- Avoid Bank Run / minimise systemic risks
- Focus Stabilise financial system (including
payment settlement) - Method
- Strengthen risk management
- Minimum capital standards
- Regulatory authority EU CEBS (coordination) /
Transposition into EU law (CAD capital adequacy
directive) - Regulatory authority UK FSA
- Regulatory authority Germany BaFin
- Regulatory authority Switzerland FBC (FINMA)
33Objectives insurance regulation
Synopsis
- Protect future benefits
- Focus Protection of beneficiaries
- Method
- Strengthen risk management
- Minimum solvency capital standards
- Regulatory authority EU CEIOPS (coordination)
- Regulatory authority UK FSA
- Regulatory authority Germany BaFin
- Regulatory authority Switzerland FOPI (FINMA)
34Regulatory framework - structure
Synopsis
- Basel II Solvency II
- Pillar I Capital requirements Solvency
requirements MR, CR, OR MR, CR, Ins.R, (OR) - Pillar II Review / Review / Quality RM Quality
RM - Pillar III Disclosure Disclosure
requirements requirements - Switzerland Swiss Finish Swiss Solvency Test
35Regulatory systems - capital / solvency adequacy
Synopsis
- Basel II Solvency II
- Approach Balance sheet extracts Total balance
sheet - MR Standard / Internal Standard / Internal
- CR Standard / Standard / Internal Internal
(Basic / Adv.) - Ins.R - Standard / Internal
- OR Simple Standard Standard Internal (AMA)
- Aggregation Weighted Average Distribution
(Correlation Diversification)
36Implementation roadmap
Synopsis
2005
2006
2007
2010
Framework
CAD
Implementation
QIS I to IV
Implementation
Implementation
QIS I
QIS II
QIS III
FrameworkDirective
Framework
Capital needsadapted
SSTReport