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Standardized approach (counterparty credit risk)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The standardized approach for counterparty credit risk (SA-CCR) is the capital requirement framework under Basel III addressing counterparty risk for derivative trades. [1] It was published by the Basel Committee in March 2014. [2] See Basel III: Finalising post-crisis reforms.

The framework replaced both non-internal model approaches: the Current Exposure Method (CEM) and the Standardised Method (SM). It is intended to be a "risk-sensitive methodology", i.e. conscious of asset class and hedging, that differentiates between margined and non-margined trades and recognizes netting benefits; considerations insufficiently addressed under the preceding frameworks.

SA-CCR calculates the exposure at default, EAD, of derivatives and "long-settlement transactions" exposed to counterparty credit risk, where EAD = α × (RC + PFE). Here, α is a "multiplier" of 1.4, acting as a buffer to ensure sufficient coverage; and:

  • RC is the "Replacement Cost" were the counterparty to default today: the current exposure, i.e. mark-to-market of all trades, is aggregated by counterparty, and then netted-off with haircutted- collateral.
  • PFE is the "Potential Future Exposure" to the counterparty: per asset class, trade-"add-ons" are aggregated to "hedging sets", with positions allowed to offset based on specified correlation assumptions, thereby reducing net exposure; these are in turn aggregated to counterparty "netting sets"; this aggregated amount is then offset by the counterparty's collateral (i.e. initial margin), which is subject to a "multiplier" that limits its benefit, applying a 5% floor to the exposure.

The SA-CCR EAD is an input to the bank's regulatory capital calculation where it is combined with the counterparty's PD and LGD to derive RWA; Some banks thus incorporate SA-CCR into their KVA calculations. Because of its two-step aggregation, capital allocation between trading desks (or even asset classes) is challenging; thus making it difficult to fairly calculate each desk's risk-adjusted return on capital. Various methods are then proposed here.[3] SA-CCR is also input to other regulatory results such as the leverage ratio and the net stable funding ratio.

References

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  1. ^ Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (2018). "Counterparty credit risk in Basel III - Executive Summary". www.bis.org
  2. ^ Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (2014-03-31). "The standardised approach for measuring counterparty credit risk exposures (BCBS 279)". www.bis.org. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  3. ^ FIS (2017). "Allocating SA-CCR fairly", www.fisglobal.com.