Background of Basel Committee
Basel Committee an Overview
Basel Accord I
Advantages & Disadvantages
Basel II framework
Basel II underlying principles
Pillar I (Minimum capital requirements)
Pillar 2 (Supervisory Review)
Pillar 3 (Market Discipline)
¢Named
after Basel, Switzerland.
¢Formed
in 1974 after the liquidation of Bank Herstatt.
¢Introduced
by G-10 countries
¢Developed
Under auspices of Bank for International Settlement
Function: regular cooperation on banking
supervisory matters.Basel Committee an Overview
¢Membership:
The central bank Governors of the Group Ten.
¢Frequency
of meetings: The Basel Committee usually meets four times per year
¢Reporting
arrangements: reports to a joint committee of central bank Governors
¢Outreach:
maintains links with supervisors not directly participating in the committee
¢Main subgroups:
The Accord Implementation Group
The Policy Development Group
The Accounting Task Force
The International Liaison Group Basel Accord I
¢Aimed
to standardized the computation of risk based capital across banks and
across countries.
¢Issued
in 1988 by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, a group of banking
supervisors which secretariat is based at the Bank for International
Settlements in Basel, Switzerland.
Advantages & Disadvantages
¢Advantages
of Basel I
¢Relatively
simple
structure
¢Substantially
increased the capital ratios of international banks and enhanced competitive
equity
¢Required
capital to be held against OBS items
¢Widespread
adoption world-wide
¢Provided
a benchmark for analytical comparative assessment
¢
¢Disadvantages
of Basel I
¢Not
aligned with the actual risks faced by banking organizations
¢Broad-brush
risk weighting structure
¢Opportunities
for regulatory capital arbitrage
¢Covered
primarily credit risk
Basel II
¢Basel
2 aims to make capital requirements more risk sensitive.
¢
¢Basel
I only accounts for credit risk and market risk – Basel II includes operational
risk and other risks.
Basel II framework
¢Basel
II is a three-pronged approach relying on so called “3 Pillars”:
Basel II underlying principles
1.Banks
should have capital appropriate for their risk taking activities (Pillar 1)
2.Banks
should be able to properly assess the risk they are taking, and supervisors
should be able to evaluate the soundness of these assessments (Pillar 2)3.Banks
should be disclosing pertinent information necessary to enable market mechanism
to complement the supervisory oversight function (Pillar 3)
Pillar I (Minimum capital requirements)
Prescribes
capital charges for:
1. Credit risk (major revision)
2. Operational risk (new provision)
3. Market risk (minor change)
Pillar
2 (Supervisory Review)
¢Emphasizes
the 4 key principles of supervisory review:
1.Banks should have a process for assessing
their overall capital adequacy in relation to their risk profile and a strategy
for maintaining their capital levels;
2.Supervisors should review and evaluate
banks’ internal capital adequacy assessments and strategies, as well as their
ability to monitor and ensure their compliance with regulatory capital ratios.
Supervisors should take appropriate supervisory action if they are not
satisfied with the result of this process;
Pillar 2 (Supervisory Review)
3.Supervisors should expect banks to
operate above the minimum regulatory capital ratios and should have the ability
to require banks to hold capital in excess of the minimum;
4.Supervisors should seek to intervene at
an early stage to prevent capital from falling below the minimum levels
required to support the risk characteristics of a particular bank and should
require rapid remedial action if capital is not maintained or restored.
Pillar 3 (Market Discipline)
¢Proposes
an extensive list of bank disclosure requirements
¢Recognizes
that markets contain disciplinary mechanisms that reward banks that manage risk
effectively and penalize those whose risk management is inept or imprudent
Simple and easy to understand comparison of Basel I and II.
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