The document discusses Basel I and its shortcomings, as well as the introduction of Basel II as an updated framework.
1) Basel I, implemented in 1992, had limited differentiation of credit risk and was a static measure of default risk. Basel II was introduced in 2004 to improve risk measurement in response to financial innovation.
2) Basel II comprised three pillars - minimum capital requirements, supervisory review, and market discipline. It introduced advanced approaches for credit, market and operational risk measurement using banks' internal models.
3) While Basel II aimed to better align regulatory capital with risk, its reliance on banks' own models left it open to underestimating risk and creating incentives to minimize capital. This contributed to
The document discusses Basel I and its shortcomings, as well as the introduction of Basel II as an updated framework.
1) Basel I, implemented in 1992, had limited differentiation of credit risk and was a static measure of default risk. Basel II was introduced in 2004 to improve risk measurement in response to financial innovation.
2) Basel II comprised three pillars - minimum capital requirements, supervisory review, and market discipline. It introduced advanced approaches for credit, market and operational risk measurement using banks' internal models.
3) While Basel II aimed to better align regulatory capital with risk, its reliance on banks' own models left it open to underestimating risk and creating incentives to minimize capital. This contributed to
The document discusses Basel I and its shortcomings, as well as the introduction of Basel II as an updated framework.
1) Basel I, implemented in 1992, had limited differentiation of credit risk and was a static measure of default risk. Basel II was introduced in 2004 to improve risk measurement in response to financial innovation.
2) Basel II comprised three pillars - minimum capital requirements, supervisory review, and market discipline. It introduced advanced approaches for credit, market and operational risk measurement using banks' internal models.
3) While Basel II aimed to better align regulatory capital with risk, its reliance on banks' own models left it open to underestimating risk and creating incentives to minimize capital. This contributed to
The document discusses Basel I and its shortcomings, as well as the introduction of Basel II as an updated framework.
1) Basel I, implemented in 1992, had limited differentiation of credit risk and was a static measure of default risk. Basel II was introduced in 2004 to improve risk measurement in response to financial innovation.
2) Basel II comprised three pillars - minimum capital requirements, supervisory review, and market discipline. It introduced advanced approaches for credit, market and operational risk measurement using banks' internal models.
3) While Basel II aimed to better align regulatory capital with risk, its reliance on banks' own models left it open to underestimating risk and creating incentives to minimize capital. This contributed to
Shortcomings of Basel I Basel I with Risk-Weighted Assets of 8% to be implemented by the end of 1992. Ultimately, this framework was introduced not only in member countries but also in virtually all countries with active international banks.
Basel I has following shortcomings:
1. Limited differentiation of Credit Risk (only 5) 2. Static measure of Default Risk 3. No recognition of Term Structure of Credit Risk 4. Simplified calculation of potential failure on counterparty risk 5. The lack of risk sensitivity 6. The limited collateral recognition 7. The incomplete coverage of risk portfolios Basel II In June 1999, the Committee issued a proposal for a new capital adequacy framework to replace the 1988 Accord. This led to the release of a revised capital framework in June 2004. Generally known as "Basel II", The Revised Framework comprised three pillars: 1. Minimum capital requirements, which sought to develop and expand the standardized rules set out in the 1988 Accord 2. Supervisory review of an institution's capital adequacy and internal assessment process 3. Effective use of disclosure as a lever to strengthen market discipline and encourage sound banking practices
The New accord was called as “A review Framework on International
Convergence of Capital Measurement & Capital Standard” or Basel II Basel II The new framework (Basel II) was designed to improve the way regulatory capital requirements reflect underlying risks and to better address the financial innovation that had occurred in recent years. The Basel II conceived on 3 triggers: a. Banking crisis of 1990 b. Shortcomings of Basel I c. Advancement of Information Technology Basel II The changes recommended as per Basel II aimed at rewarding and encouraging continued improvements in risk measurement and control. Following procedure followed: ➢ 1999: Basel Committee proposed new rules i.e. Basel II ➢ Jan 2001: Revised ➢ April 2003: Revised and Quantitative Impact Studies (QIS) were carried out ➢ 2004: First set of rules published ➢ Nov 2005: Updated ➢ 2006: Operational Risk ➢ 2007: Implementation of Rules Basel II Basel II addresses two aspects:
a. Improvement of Regulatory Capital (Considering Financial
Innovation) b. Continuous Improvement in Risk Measurement ➢ Market Risk ➢ Operational Risk Basel II Implementation of the Basel II Framework move forward around the globe. ▪ A significant number of countries and banks already implemented at the beginning of 2007. ▪ In many other jurisdictions, the necessary infrastructure (legislation, regulation, supervisory guidance, etc) to implement the Framework is either in place or in process. ▪ Some countries to proceed with implementation of Basel II’s advanced approaches in 2008 and 2009. ▪ This progress is taking place in both Basel Committee member and non-member countries. Basel II Basel II uses a "three pillars" concept:
▪ Minimum Capital Requirement
▪ Supervisory Review Process ▪ Market Discipline Basel II: Three Pillars Basel II: Pillar 1 Pillar I: Minimum Capital Requirement (MCR)
I. Capital Measurement: New Methods (Fair Value Accounting)
II. Market Risk: In Line with 1993 & 1996 III. Operational Risk: Working on new methods
Pillar I is trying to achieve
If the bank’s own internal calculations show that they have extremely risky, loss-prone loans that generate high internal capital charges, their formal risk-based capital charges should also be high Likewise, lower risk loans should carry lower risk-based capital charges Basel II: Pillar 1 Credit Risk Measurement 1. Standardized Approach: Using external rating for determining risk weights 2. Foundation Internal Ratings Based (IRB) Approach (Bank computes only the probability of default) 3. Advanced IRB Approach: Bank computes all risk components (except effective maturity) Basel II: Pillar 1
Operational & Risk Capital under Basel II
Pillar I also adds a new capital component for operational risk (Operational risk covers the risk of loss due to system breakdowns, fire, employee fraud or misconduct, errors in models or natural or man-made catastrophes, among others)
a. Basic Indicator Approach
b. Standardized Approach c. Advance Measurement Approach Basel II: Pillar 2 Supervisory Review Process
a. Banks are advised to develop an internal capital
assessment process and set targets for capital to commensurate with the bank’s risk profile
b. Supervisory authority is responsible for evaluating how
well banks are assessing their capital adequacy Basel II: Pillar 3 Market Discipline ▪ Aims to reinforce market discipline through enhanced disclosure by banks. ▪ It is an indirect approach, that assumes sufficient competition within the banking sector. ▪ Regulatory disclosure is different from Accounting Disclosure ▪ Adjustment made for entities ▪ Terms & conditions and main features of all Capital Instruments Implıcatıons of Basel II a. The practices in Basel II represent several important departures from the traditional calculation of bank capital The very largest banks will operate under a system that is different than that used by other banks The implications of this for long-term competition between these banks is uncertain, but merits further attention b. Basel II’s proposals rely on banks’ own internal risk estimates to set capital requirements ➢ This represents a conceptual leap in determining adequate regulatory capital c. For regulators, evaluating the integrity of bank models is a significant step beyond the traditional supervisory process Implıcatıons of Basel II Despite Basel II’s quantitative basis, much will still depend on the judgment: ▪ Of banks in formulating their estimates ▪ Of supervisors in validating the assumptions used by banks in their models Shortcomings of Basel II Under the Basel II framework, regulators allow large banks with sophisticated risk management systems to use risk assessment based on their own models in determining the minimum amount of capital required. The need to recapitalise banks reveals that the internal risk models of many banks performed poorly and greatly under-estimated risk exposure, forcing banks to reassess and reprice credit risk. A more fundamental problem is that Basel II creates perverse incentives to underestimate credit risk. Because banks are allowed to use their own models for assessing risk and determining the amount of regulatory capital, they may be tempted to be overoptimistic about their risk exposure in order to minimise required regulatory capital and to maximise return on equity. Quantitative Impact Studies” (QISs) show that bank capital requirements will fall further for many banks when the Basel II rules are fully implemented. Shortcomings of Basel II ▪ The turmoil on financial markets, which has caused large banks to take substantial losses and search for significant new capital, indicates that Basel II should not be implemented, if at all, without first making a number of important changes. ▪ First, we urge the Basel committee to conduct another quantitative impact study using observations from the recent turmoil before allowing banks to use their internal models for calculating regulatory capital. ▪ Overdependence on Rating of assets ▪ It provided incentive to a bank’s management to underestimate credit risk. ▪ Basel II norms allowed banks to use their own models to assess risk and determine the capital amount required to meet regulations. Most banks chose models that were overly optimistic to build risk models that allowed them to provide less capital for regulatory norms and to increase return on equity. Shortcomings of Basel II Basel II’s effectiveness depended a lot on a strong regulator. Basel II gave banks a lot of room to decide how to implement the regulation’s spirit correctly. Basel II norms were not adequate in covering market risk. This was especially true for investment banks, which had large exposure to market-linked securities. Basel II often allowed bonds issued as part of securitization to be treated as AAA securities.
The banking industry was evolving at a rapid pace, so there was a
need for a completely new look at regulations. For this, Basel III was introduced as we shall see in our next part of the series. Thank You
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