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Basel II Accord Presentation to Information Systems Audit and Control Association

Overview. Objective of the original Basel Accord

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Basel II Accord Presentation to Information Systems Audit and Control Association

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    1. Basel II Accord Presentation to Information Systems Audit and Control Association

    2. Overview Objective of the original Basel Accord ‘to provide financial stability and minimum prudential standards to an increasingly international global banking system’ Basle I Accord Restricted to : Market Risk Basic Measures Of Credit Risk ‘One size fits all’

    3. Basle II Accord New Accord’s objective Align regulatory requirements with economic principles of risk management How? Three Pillars which includes the measurement of Operational Risk. Overall Goal To provide a measurement for financial institutions to quantify their internal controls, the manner in which in they are managed and the level of regulatory capital that they must maintain.

    4. Timelines First Consultation Paper June 1999 QIS 1 July 2000 Second Consultation Paper January 2001 QIS 2 April 2001 QIS 2.5 November 2001 QIS 3 (Technical guidance) October 2002 Third Consultation Paper July 2003 New Accord Mid 2004 Dual Running of old & new Thru 2006 Implementation of EU Directive End 2006

    5. The Three Pillars Pillar I Market Risk Same criteria as Basle I Credit Risk Standardised Approach ( Risk Weightings) Internal Ratings (Foundation & Advanced Approach) Operational Risk Basic, Standardised and Advanced Approaches

    6. The Three Pillars CREDIT RISK (80%), MARKET RISK (8%) OPERATIONAL RISK (12%) WILL DETERMINE THE NEW CAPITAL REQUIREMENT UNDER BASEL II

    7. The Three Pillars Pillar II Supervisory Review – Four Principles Banks should have a strategy/process per institution for measuring their overall capital requirements and maintaining those capital levels Supervisors should review and evaluate institution’s assessments and strategies for calculating capital requirements ( includes monitoring/compliance with regulatory requirements) Supervisors should expect banks to operate above the minimum regulatory capital ratios and should have the ability to require banks to hold more than the required capital level Supervisors should be expected to intervene at an early stage should capital fall below specific levels

    8. The Three Pillars Pillar II Accord Implementation Group (Aug 2003) Set of principles to promote practical co-operation & information exchange among supervisors To promote consistency through the exchange of information between supervisors on approaches to implementation. Manage home-host implementation issues concerning the advanced approach to Operational Risk

    9. The Three Pillars Pillar III Market discipline to ensure controls and soundness of banks Core Disclosures, increasing transparency among banking institutions No change since Basle 1

    10. Effects of Basle II on Financial Institutions Effects Implement strategy to align regulatory capital with economic risks Choose the most appropriate credit/operational risk approach for your institution Collect, store and analyse data across each function within your business Embed these new or improved processes within your organisation

    11. Challenges of Basle II on Financial Institutions Understanding and interpreting the overall effects on each area within your business Change management in relation to creating a risk aware culture in your organisation Recognise the new expectations from regulators such as IFSRA, rating agencies and your customers Review your current products as part of your business risk assessment Outline a strategy to utilise any gains that may be achieved

    12. Others Customers New costs relating to disclosures, internal/external ratings/better collaterialisation Ensuring transparency of transactions/processes Regulators New costs related to additional resources Set incentives for banks through stress testing and review processes. Rating Agencies Provide an increased transparency with regard to rating components Maintain a high quality of ratings Increase competition with entry by other agencies within Europe to the market

    13. Where to Start? QIS III analysis 350 Banks from 43 Countries participated Main Result Lack of data retained by each of the participating organisations

    14. Getting Started Senior Management Support Identify and assign responsibilities at all levels All ratings and estimations must be approved by the board of Directors or a designated committee Senior management must have a good understanding of ratings systems designs and processes Internal ratings must be an essential part of the reporting to these parties

    15. Getting Started Phase I Supervisory Committee Cross-functional Identify other regulatory concerns that may overlap in relation to the corporate governance, such as Sarbannes Oxley and IAS. Prepare a Gap Analysis Prepare an Impact Analysis Complete an overall risk assessment of your business Complete a cost benefit related to the enhancements or new processes that need to be introduced to ensure compliant

    16. Getting Started Phase II Corporate Governance Risk Management Credit Risk Operational Risk Market and Other Risks Capital Planning Disclosure Supervisory Review Process

    17. Risk Database and Management Review Collation, Storage and Analysis How? Criteria? When

    18. Concerns LIBA & BBA August 2003 ‘The new accord , as currently proposed , is unduly complex and will be difficult for our members to implement and for national regulators, even in the G10, to supervise’

    19. Why implement? The top ten banks in US are complying Control 95% of all foreign capital held in the US Using the AMA approach and Internal Ratings Approach Along with other 10 banks control 66% of total US capital

    20. Why Implement? Rating Agencies Even with Basel II in mind, operational risk management should first and foremost be an effort to measure and control operational risk, rather than an exercise in efficient capital allocation’ ‘Moody’s believe that well calibrated quantitative tools can effectively measure a large segment of operational risk, notably the high-frequency low impact events’ ‘Many banks have begun in earnest to collect loss data and to build internal loss models’ ‘A bank with good risk management systems is not necessarily a bank that will be invariably successful in avoiding risks. But good and reliable risk-management systems and processes are nevertheless a very good start.’ 

    21. Data Management Technology Based on your institutions requirements May incorporate all three pillars in one May involve a series of manual workarounds until system is developed

    22. Data Management Credit Risk Historical Data Integrity of data Analysis re comparison to current portfolios and lending policies Assessment of capital allocation per loan, per credit portfolio and overall credit risk exposure Create behavioural score models, which provide the likehood of the customer to default

    23. Data Management Requirement to segment the portfolio by; Product Type Borrower Risk Delinquency Status Vintage Analysis The IRB methodology requires the calculation of ; Probability of Default (PD) The likelihood that a loan will default. Exposure at Default (EAD) Value of the gross Exposure. (ie. Balance outstanding + 75% of revolving credit facilities)   Loss Given Default (LGD) The loss on a loan after the borrower has defaulted.

    24. Data Management Credit Risk Gradings are required; Minimum 6 to 9 grades for performing borrowers Minimum 2 grades for non-performing borrowers No more than 30% of gross exposures should fall in any single borrower grade Credit risk is derived from the analysis of historical data. Requirement to have five years of historical data for validation and calibration in models Banks back test their models over an ‘economic cycle’ Stress testing every six months going forward Models must be used in normal business decisions

    25. Operational Risk Initially May be manual reporting of events Logging of risks Technology Could incorporate this into the overall credit risk system

    26. Data Management Advanced Measurement Approaches There are three potential approaches under Advanced Measurement Models are based on a bank’s own internal rating systems and operational loss data Internal Measurement Approach (IMA) Business lines sub-divided by risk type The models are generally based on the following information:   Operational Risk is a function of (EI * PE * LGE) EI Exposure Indicator PE Probability of Loss LGE Loss Given Event

    27. Data Management Loss Distribution Approach Estimate future operational risk losses by each business line or risk type Forecasting Models are required Dependent on banks foreseeing the unforeseeable 3. Scorecard Approach Scorecards are developed to rate the risk profile of each business line COLLECTION OF OPERATIONAL LOSS DATA IS KEY TO BUILDING INTERNAL RISK MODELS

    28. Risk Of Not Implementing Basle II Competitive nature of your institution Ratings and margins Confidence and Integrity based on best practices Standard Setting over time

    29. Who has begun? Most institutions have begun or some already have systems in place Where are you?

    30. Questions and Answers

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