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Title[ Part 3: The Second Pillar - Supervisory Review Process

Section[ 4. Credit concentration risk



770.     A risk concentration is any single exposure or group of exposures with the potential to produce losses large enough (relative to a bank’s capital, total assets, or overall risk level) to threaten a bank’s health or ability to maintain its core operations. Risk concentrations are arguably the single most important cause of major problems in banks.


771.     Risk concentrations can arise in a bank’s assets, liabilities, or off-balance sheet items, through the execution or processing of transactions (either product or service), or through a combination of exposures across these broad categories. Because lending is the primary activity of most banks, credit risk concentrations  are often the most  material risk concentrations within a bank.


772.     Credit risk concentrations, by their nature, are based on common or correlated risk factors, which, in times of stress, have an adverse effect on the creditworthiness of each of the individual counterparties making up the concentration. Concentration risk arises in both direct exposures to obligors and may also occur through exposures to protection providers. Such concentrations are not addressed in the Pillar 1 capital charge for credit risk.


773.     Banks should have in  place effective internal policies, systems and controls to identify, measure, monitor, and control their credit risk concentrations. Banks should explicitly consider the extent of their credit risk concentrations in their assessment of capital adequacy under Pillar 2. These policies should cover the different forms of credit risk concentrations to which a bank may be exposed. Such concentrations include:


w Significant   exposures   to   an       individual  counterparty   or   group   of   related counterparties. In many jurisdictions, supervisors define a limit for exposures of this nature, commonly referred to as a large exposure limit. Banks might also establish an aggregate limit for the management and control of all of its large exposures as a group;


w Credit exposures to counterparties in the same economic sector or geographic region;


w Credit exposures to counterparties whose financial performance is dependent on the same activity or commodity; and


w Indirect credit exposures arising from  a bank’s CRM activities (e.g. exposure to a single collateral type or to credit protection provided by a single counterparty).


774.     A  bank’s  framework  for  managing  credit  risk  concentrations  should  be  clearly documented and should include a definition of the credit risk concentrations relevant to the bank and how these concentrations and their corresponding limits are calculated. Limits should be defined in relation to a bank’s capital, total assets or, where adequate measures exist, its overall risk level.


775.     A bank’s management should conduct periodic stress tests of its major credit risk concentrations and review the results of those tests to identify and respond to potential changes in market conditions that could adversely impact the bank’s performance.


776.     A bank should ensure that, in respect of credit risk concentrations, it complies with the Committee document  Principles for the Management  of Credit Risk (September 2000) and the more detailed guidance in the Appendix to that paper.


777.     In the course of their activities, supervisors should assess the extent  of a bank’s credit  risk  concentrations,  how  they  are  managed,  and  the  extent  to  which  the  bank considers  them  in  its  internal  assessment   of  capital   adequacy  under  Pillar  2.  Such assessments should include reviews of the results of a bank’s stress tests. Supervisors should  take  appropriate  actions  where  the  risks  arising  from  a  bank’s   credit  risk concentrations are not adequately addressed by the bank.


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