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Title[ Introduction

Section[ Introduction



International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards:

A Revised Framework

(updated November 2005)


1.         This report presents the outcome of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision’s

(“the Committee”)1 work over recent years to secure international convergence on revisions to supervisory regulations governing the capital adequacy of internationally active banks. Following the publication of the Committee’s first round of proposals for revising the capital adequacy framework in June 1999, an extensive consultative process was set in train in all member  countries  and  the  proposals  were  also  circulated  to  supervisory  authorities worldwide. The Committee subsequently released additional proposals for consultation in January 2001 and April 2003 and furthermore conducted three quantitative impact studies related to its proposals. As a result of these efforts, many valuable improvements have been made to the original proposals. The present  paper is now a statement of the Committee agreed by all its members. It sets  out the details of the agreed Framework for measuring capital adequacy and the minimum standard to be achieved which the national supervisory authorities  represented  on  the  Committee  will  propose  for  adoption  in  their  respective countries. This Framework and the standard it contains have been endorsed by the Central Bank Governors and Heads of Banking Supervision of the Group of Ten countries.


2.         The Committee expects its members to move forward with the appropriate adoption procedures in their respective countries. In a  number of instances, these procedures will include additional impact assessments of the  Committee’s Framework as well as further opportunities for comments by interested parties to be provided to national authorities. The Committee intends the Framework set out here to be available for implementation as of year- end 2006. However, the Committee feels that one further year of impact studies or parallel calculations will be needed for the most advanced approaches, and these therefore will be available for implementation as of year-end  2007. More details on the transition to the revised Framework and its relevance to particular approaches are set out in paragraphs 45 to 49.


3.         This document is being circulated to supervisory authorities worldwide with a view to encouraging them to consider adopting this revised Framework at such time as they believe is consistent with their broader supervisory priorities. While the revised Framework has been designed  to  provide  options  for  banks  and  banking  systems  worldwide,  the  Committee acknowledges that moving toward its adoption in the near future may not be a first priority for all  non-G10  supervisory  authorities  in  terms  of  what  is  needed  to  strengthen  their supervision. Where this is the case, each national supervisor should consider carefully the benefits of  the revised Framework in the  context of its  domestic banking system when developing a timetable and approach to implementation.


1               The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision is a committee of banking supervisory authorities  that was established by the central bank governors of the Group of Ten countries  in 1975. It consists of  senior representatives of bank supervisory authorities and central banks from Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States. It usually meets at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, where its permanent Secretariat is located.


4.         The fundamental objective of the Committee’s work to revise the 1988 Accord2 has been to develop a framework that would further strengthen the soundness and stability of the international banking system while maintaining sufficient consistency that capital adequacy regulation will not be  a significant source of competitive  inequality among internationally active banks. The Committee believes that the revised Framework will promote the adoption of stronger risk management practices by the banking industry, and views this as one of its major benefits. The Committee notes that, in their comments on the proposals, banks and other  interested  parties  have  welcomed  the  concept  and  rationale  of  the  three  pillars

(minimum  capital  requirements,  supervisory  review,  and  market  discipline)  approach  on which the revised Framework is based. More generally, they have expressed support for improving capital regulation to take into account changes in banking and risk management practices while at the same time preserving the benefits of a framework that can be applied as uniformly as possible at the national level.


5.         In  developing  the  revised  Framework,  the  Committee  has  sought  to  arrive  at significantly more risk-sensitive capital requirements that are conceptually sound and at the same time pay due regard to particular features of the present supervisory and accounting systems in individual member countries. It believes that this objective has been achieved. The Committee is also retaining key elements of the 1988 capital adequacy framework, including the general requirement for banks to hold total capital equivalent to at least 8% of their risk-weighted assets; the basic structure of the 1996 Market Risk Amendment regarding the treatment of market risk; and the definition of eligible capital.


6.         A significant innovation of the revised Framework is the greater use of assessments of risk provided by banks’ internal  systems as  inputs to capital calculations. In taking this step, the Committee is also putting forward a detailed set of minimum requirements designed to ensure the integrity of these internal risk assessments. It is not the Committee’s intention to dictate the form or operational detail of banks’ risk management policies and practices. Each supervisor will develop a set of review procedures for ensuring that banks’ systems and controls are adequate to serve as the basis for the capital calculations. Supervisors will need to exercise  sound judgements when determining a bank’s state of readiness, particularly during the implementation process. The Committee expects national supervisors will focus on compliance with the minimum requirements as a means of ensuring the overall integrity of a bank’s ability to provide prudential inputs to the capital calculations and not as an end in itself.


7.         The revised Framework provides a range of options for determining the capital requirements for credit risk and operational risk to allow banks and supervisors to select approaches  that  are  most  appropriate  for  their  operations  and  their  financial  market infrastructure.  In  addition,  the  Framework  also  allows  for  a  limited  degree  of  national discretion in the way in which each of these options may be applied, to adapt the standards to  different  conditions  of  national  markets.  These  features,  however,  will  necessitate substantial efforts by national authorities to ensure sufficient consistency in application. The Committee intends to monitor and review the application of the Framework in the period ahead  with  a  view  to  achieving  even  greater  consistency.  In  particular,   its  Accord Implementation Group (AIG) was established to promote consistency in the Framework’s application   by   encouraging   supervisors   to   exchange   information   on   implementation approaches.


2 International Convergence of Capital Measurement and  Capital Standards, Basel Committee on Banking

Supervision (July 1988), as amended.


8.         The  Committee  has  also  recognised  that  home  country  supervisors  have  an important  role  in  leading  the  enhanced  cooperation  between  home  and  host  country supervisors that will be required for effective implementation. The AIG is developing practical arrangements for cooperation and coordination that reduce implementation burden on banks and conserve supervisory resources. Based  on the work of the AIG, and based on its interactions with supervisors and the industry, the Committee has issued general principles for the cross-border implementation of the revised Framework and more focused principles for  the  recognition  of  operational  risk  capital  charges  under  advanced  measurement approaches for home and host supervisors.


9.         It should be stressed that the revised Framework is designed to establish minimum levels  of  capital  for  internationally  active  banks.  As  under  the  1988  Accord,  national authorities  will be free to adopt arrangements that  set higher levels of minimum capital. Moreover, they are free to put in place supplementary measures of capital adequacy for the banking organisations they charter. National authorities may use a supplementary capital measure as a way to address, for example, the potential uncertainties in the accuracy of the measure of risk exposures inherent in any capital rule or to constrain the extent to which an organisation may fund itself with debt. Where a jurisdiction employs a supplementary capital measure (such as a leverage ratio or a large exposure limit) in conjunction with the measure set forth in this Framework, in some instances the capital required under the supplementary measure may be more binding. More generally, under the second pillar, supervisors should expect banks to operate above minimum regulatory capital levels.


10.       The revised Framework is more risk sensitive than the 1988 Accord, but countries where risks in the local banking market are relatively high nonetheless need to consider if banks should be required to hold additional capital over and above the Basel minimum. This is particularly the case with the more broad brush standardised approach, but, even in the case of  the internal ratings-based  (IRB) approach, the risk of major loss events  may be higher than allowed for in this Framework.


11.       The Committee also wishes to highlight the need for banks and supervisors to give appropriate attention to the second (supervisory review) and third (market discipline) pillars of the revised Framework. It is critical that the minimum capital requirements of the first pillar be accompanied by a  robust implementation  of the second, including efforts by banks to assess their capital adequacy and by supervisors to review such assessments. In addition, the disclosures provided under the third pillar of this Framework will be essential in ensuring that market discipline is an effective complement to the other two pillars.


12.       The  Committee  is  aware  that  interactions  between  regulatory  and  accounting approaches at both the national and international level can have significant consequences for  the  comparability  of  the  resulting  measures  of  capital  adequacy  and  for  the  costs associated with the implementation of these  approaches. The Committee believes that its decisions with respect to unexpected and expected losses represent a major step forward in this regard. The Committee and its members intend to continue playing a pro-active role in the  dialogue  with  accounting  authorities   in   an  effort  to  reduce,   wherever  possible, inappropriate disparities between regulatory and accounting standards.


13.       The revised Framework presented here reflects several significant changes relative to the Committee’s most recent consultative  proposal  in April 2003. A number of these changes have already been described in the Committee’s press statements of October 2003, January 2004 and May 2004. These include the changes in the approach to the treatment of expected losses (EL) and unexpected losses (UL) and to the treatment of securitisation exposures. In  addition to  these, changes  in  the treatments of  credit risk mitigation and qualifying  revolving  retail  exposures,  among  others,  are  also  being  incorporated.  The Committee also has sought to clarify its expectations regarding the need for banks using the advanced IRB approach to incorporate the effects arising from economic downturns into their loss-given-

default (LGD) parameters.


14.       The  Committee  believes  it  is  important  to  reiterate  its  objectives  regarding  the overall level of minimum capital requirements. These are to broadly maintain the aggregate level of such requirements, while also providing incentives to adopt the more advanced risk-sensitive approaches of the revised Framework. The Committee has confirmed the need to further review the calibration of the revised Framework prior to its implementation. Should the information available at the time of such review reveal that the Committee’s objectives on overall capital would not be achieved, the Committee is prepared to take actions necessary to address  the situation. In particular, and  consistent with the principle that  such actions should be separated from the design of the Framework itself, this would entail the application of a single scaling factor ? which could be either greater than or less than one ? to the IRB capital requirement resulting from the revised Framework. The current best estimate of the scaling factor using Quantitative Impact Study  3 data adjusted for the EL-UL decisions is

1.06. The final determination of any scaling factor will be based on the parallel running results, which will reflect all of the elements of the Framework to be implemented.


15.       The Committee has designed the revised Framework to be a more forward-looking approach to capital adequacy supervision, one that has the capacity to evolve with time. This evolution is necessary to ensure that the Framework keeps pace with market developments and advances in risk management practices, and the Committee intends to monitor these developments and to make revisions when necessary. In this regard,  the Committee has benefited greatly from its frequent interactions with industry participants and looks forward to enhanced  opportunities  for  dialogue.  The  Committee  also  intends  to  keep  the  industry apprised of its future work agenda.


16.       In July 2005, the Committee published additional guidance in the document  The Application  of Basel II to Treading Activities and the Treatment of Double Default Effects. That  guidance  was  developed  jointly  with  the  International  Organization  of  Securities Commissions (IOSCO) and demonstrates the capacity of the revised Framework to evolve with time. It refined the treatments of counterparty credit risk, double default effects, short- term maturity adjustment and failed transactions, and improved the trading book regime.3


17.       One area where the Committee intends to undertake additional work of a longer- term nature is in relation to the definition of eligible capital. One motivation for this is the fact that the changes in the treatment of expected and unexpected losses and related changes in the treatment of provisions in the Framework  set out here generally tend to reduce Tier 1 capital requirements relative to total capital requirements. Moreover, converging on a uniform international capital standard under this Framework will ultimately require the identification of an agreed set of capital instruments that are available to absorb unanticipated losses on a going-concern basis. The Committee announced its intention to review the definition of capital as a follow-up to the revised approach to Tier 1 eligibility as announced in its October

1998 press release, “Instruments eligible for inclusion in Tier 1 capital”. It will explore further issues  surrounding  the  definition  of  regulatory  capital,  but  does  not  intend  to  propose changes as a result of this longer-term review prior to the implementation of the revised Framework set out in this document. In the meantime, the Committee will continue its efforts to  ensure  the  consistent  application  of  its  1998  decisions  regarding  the  composition  of regulatory capital across jurisdictions.


3 The additional guidance does not modify the definition  of trading book  set forth in the revised Framework. Rather, it focuses on policies and procedures that banks must have in place to book exposures in their trading book. However, it is the Committee’s view that, at the present time, open equity stakes in hedge funds, private equity investments and real  estate holdings do not meet  the definition  of trading book, owing to significant constraints on the ability of banks to liquidate these positions and value them reliably on a daily basis.


18.       The  Committee  also  seeks  to  continue  to  engage  the  banking  industry  in  a discussion  of  prevailing  risk  management  practices,  including  those  practices  aiming  to produce quantified measures of risk and economic capital. Over the last decade, a number of banking organisations have invested resources in modelling the credit risk arising from their significant business operations. Such models are intended to assist banks in quantifying, aggregating  and  managing  credit  risk  across  geographic  and  product  lines.  While  the Framework presented in this document stops short of allowing the results of such credit risk models to be used for regulatory capital purposes, the Committee recognises the importance of  continued  active  dialogue  regarding  both  the  performance  of  such  models  and  their comparability   across   banks.   Moreover,   the   Committee   believes   that   a   successful implementation of the revised Framework will  provide banks and supervisors with critical experience necessary to address such challenges. The Committee understands that the IRB approach represents a point on the continuum between purely regulatory measures of credit risk and an approach that builds more fully on internal credit risk models. In principle, further movements along that continuum are foreseeable, subject to an ability to address adequately concerns about reliability, comparability, validation, and competitive equity. In the meantime, the Committee believes that additional attention to the results of internal credit risk models in the supervisory review process and in banks’ disclosures will be highly beneficial for the accumulation of information on the relevant issues.


19.       This document is divided into four parts as illustrated in the following chart. The first part, scope  of application, details how the capital requirements are to  be applied  within a banking  group.  Calculation  of  the  minimum  capital  requirements  for  credit  risk  and operational risk, as well as certain trading book issues are provided in part two. The third and fourth  parts  outline  expectations  concerning  supervisory  review  and  market  discipline, respectively.


19 (i).   This updated version of the revised Framework, which was initially released in June

2004,  incorporates  the  additional  guidance   set  forth  in  the  Committee’s  paper   The

Application of Basel II to Trading Activities and the Treatment of Double Default Effects (July

2005). The Amendment to the Capital Accord to incorporate Market Risks (January 1996) has also been updated to reflect the changes introduced by the revised Framework and the above-mentioned document.


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