Lex Defining G-SIBs and additional loss absorbency requts 2011.08.12 - 0 views
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Cross-jurisdictional activity.
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the greater the global reach of a bank, the more difficult it is to coordinate its resolution and the more widespread the effects of its failure.
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take into account the liabilities of all offices of the relevant bank to entities outside the home market and include all liabilities to non-residents of its home jurisdiction.
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bank’s distress or failure is more likely to damage the global economy or financial markets if its activities comprise a large share of global activity.
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contagion in respect of other institutions depending on the network of contractual obligations in which it operates.
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systemic impact of a bank’s distress or failure is expected to be negatively related to the substitutability of its services.
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these institutions and customers may be unable to process payments immediately, affecting their liquidity.
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The BCBS provides some opportunity for individual supervisors of banks to make adjustments to a bank's G-SIB criteria determined by reference to the above criteria but states that it believes the bar for any such adjustment should be high, and it only expects such adjustments in exceptional cases.
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not proposing to develop a fixed list of G-SIBs. Banks could therefore migrate in and out of SIB status over time
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G-SIBs, each bank will grouped into a category of systemic importance based on its score under the indicator based test specified above.
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Each of these indicators is given a 20% weighting and, as specified below, most of the indicators are made up of two or more sub-indicators
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contingent capital should not be capable of meeting the additional loss absorbency requirement for G-SIBs
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for consideration at the next G-20 meeting in November 2011, and it is expected they will be endorsed at such meeting.
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the common equity requirement for the largest global banks increasing from the current 2% of risk weighted assets to 9.5% (and potentially 10.5%)
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G-SIBs will have some time to plan for the new loss absorbency requirement. The BCBS is proposing that the requirement will be phased in at the same time as the new capital conservation and countercyclical buffers between 1 January 2016, becoming fully effective at the start of 2019
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the minimum “cut-off score” in relation to which banks will be regarded as G-SIBs will be set by 1 January 2014, and national jurisdictions will be expected to incorporate the new rules into legislation by 1 January 2015.
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new Basel III framework at the end of 2010, the BCBS mandated all banks to hold significantly more capital than is currently the case as well as introducing new leverage and liquidity ratios
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The Basel III rules apply to all banks. In addition, the FSB and the BCBS have been considering additional rules to apply to the largest global banks to deal with concerns that such banks are regarded as too big to fail
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Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (“BCBS”) and the Financial Stability Board (“FSB”) published two papers relating to entities regarded as globally systemic important financial institutions (“G-SIFIs”)