- Liquidity Risk: They need liquid assets to mitigate this.
- Solvency Risk: They need capital to mitigate solvency risk so that losses for degraded asset quality do not erode depositor’s money.
Basel, a city in Switzerland, is the headquarters of the Bureau of International Settlement (BIS), the organization of central banks of the world. Basel Committee was formed in 1974 as a regulatory committee to maintain financial stability across the banking institutions in the world. It was established by the Central Bank Governors of the Group of Ten countries at the end of 1974 in the aftermath of serious disturbances in international currency and banking markets (notably the failure of Bankhaus Herstatt in West Germany). The Committee suggested a set of international standards for bank regulation, most notably its landmark publications of the accords on capital adequacy which are commonly known as Basel I, Basel II and, most recently, Basel III. The primary activity of the committee so formed was to bridge the gaps in international supervisory coverage so that (i) no bank would escape supervision, and (ii) supervision would be adequate and consistent across members involved. Thus, the committee so formed came up with a set of guidelines namely Basel I, Basel II and Basel III.
Basel I - 1988
- The focus of this norm was on credit risk.
- Capital and structure of risk weights for banks were laid down.
- The minimum capital requirement was fixed at 8% of risk-weighted assets (RWA) by the end of 1992.
- India adopted Basel 1 guidelines in 1999.
With time the needs of the banking system do change and therefore the BASEL committee also updates the norms to suit the needs of changing times.
Basel II - 2004
This accord was based on three pillars which are given below:
- Minimum capital requirements, which sought to develop and expand the standardized rules set out in the 1988 Accord.
- Supervisory review of an institution’s capital adequacy and internal assessment process.
- Effective use of disclosure as a lever to strengthen market discipline and encourage sound banking practices.
This framework was designed to improve the way regulatory capital requirements reflect underlying risks and to better address the financial innovation that had occurred in recent years.
Basel III - 2010
Basel regulations published so far focused on the granulation of risks and therefore a system was required that would focus on the financial system as a whole and not on the individual granularities. This didn’t help much in preventing the collapse of banks like Lehman Brothers. So this accord was framed to ensure that the Banking sector is shockproof from the various economic and geopolitical shocks to the Banking system. Thus, Basel III was formed after the recession of 2009 to regulate the financial sector as a whole and not just the individual elements.
The major propositions of BASEL III were:
- Counter-cyclical buffers to mitigate the risks of credit and assets turning stale.
- Better capital quality to meet financial risks.
- Leverage and liquidity ratios were to be maintained at a safe level as directed.
- Common equity has to be at least 4.5% of total risk-weighted assets.
- The minimum total capital requirement was maintained at the current 8% level(9% for Indian PSUs).
- The total capital has to be at least 10.5% when combined with the conservation buffer.
Thus Basel III takes care of the entire banking system, thereby cushioning against the shocks that can arise in the system. India is a member of G20 countries and since BASEL regulations are mandated for G20 countries, RBI adopted BASEL III norms for the banks and therefore it is mandatory for the banks to meet the BASEL norms or else they get penalised. This ensures that the Indian Banking system is resilient enough from the systemic shocks.
Comments
Sumit Kumar
Not a great value add, this was more of a copy paste of rules and regulation, whereas the title uses heavy words such as understanding and implications.
11 Jun 2019, 04.58 PM