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Title[ Part 2: The First Pillar - Minimum Capital Requirements

Section[ IV. Credit Risk — Securitisation Framework



A.         Scope  and  definitions  of  transactions  covered  under  the  securitisation framework


538.     Banks must apply the  securitisation framework for determining regulatory capital requirements on exposures arising from traditional and synthetic  securitisations or similar structures that contain features common to both. Since securitisations may be structured in many different ways, the capital treatment of a securitisation exposure must be determined on the basis of its economic substance rather than its legal form. Similarly, supervisors will look to the economic substance of a transaction to determine whether it should be subject to the  securitisation  framework  for  purposes  of  determining  regulatory  capital.  Banks  are encouraged  to  consult  with  their  national  supervisors  when  there  is  uncertainty  about whether a given transaction should be considered a securitisation. For example, transactions involving cash flows from real estate (e.g. rents) may be considered  specialised  lending exposures, if warranted.


539.      A traditional securitisation is a structure where the cash flow from an underlying pool of exposures is used to service at least two  different stratified risk  positions or tranches reflecting  different  degrees  of  credit  risk.  Payments  to  the  investors  depend  upon  the performance of the specified underlying exposures, as opposed to being derived from an obligation of the entity  originating those exposures. The stratified/tranched structures that characterise securitisations differ from ordinary senior/subordinated debt instruments in that junior securitisation tranches can absorb losses without interrupting contractual payments to more senior tranches,  whereas subordination  in a senior/subordinated debt structure is a matter of priority of rights to the proceeds of liquidation.


540.      A  synthetic securitisation is a structure with at least two different  stratified risk positions or tranches that reflect different degrees of credit risk where credit risk of an underlying pool of exposures is transferred, in whole or in part, through the use of funded

(e.g.  credit-linked  notes)  or  unfunded  (e.g.  credit  default  swaps)  credit  derivatives  or guarantees  that serve to hedge the credit risk of the portfolio. Accordingly, the investors’ potential risk is dependent upon the performance of the underlying pool.


541.     Banks’ exposures to a securitisation are hereafter referred to as “securitisation exposures”. Securitisation exposures can include but are not restricted to the following: asset-backed securities, mortgage-backed securities, credit enhancements, liquidity facilities, interest  rate  or  currency  swaps,  credit  derivatives  and  tranched  cover  as  described  in paragraph 199. Reserve accounts, such as cash collateral accounts, recorded as an asset by the originating bank must also be treated as securitisation exposures.


542.     Underlying  instruments  in  the  pool  being  securitised  may  include  but  are  not restricted  to  the  following:  loans,  commitments,  asset-backed  and  mortgage-backed securities, corporate bonds, equity securities, and private equity investments. The underlying pool may include one or more exposures.




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