Basel 2 - Deloitte
Basel 2 - Deloitte
Basel 2 - Deloitte
“Lessons in Progress”:
Commercial Credit Risk Data, Measurement and
Technology Challenges
Alok Sinha
Principal
Deloitte & Touche LLP
Agenda
Industry Impact
Closing Remarks
Basel Overview & Current Status
Background on the Basel Accord
Final NPR
Basel I-A released for
ANPR comment
Released
BIS-Final
rules issued
Basel II • Supervisory Guidance Expected
U.S. ANPR U.S. NPR
• Basel 1A NPR Expected
issued draft
released
1999 – 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Today
Supervisory
Supervisory
Review
Review
Process
Process Market
Market
Minimum
Minimum
Capital Discipline
Discipline
Capital
Requirements
Requirements
Pillar 2
All risks are considered: credit, market, Considers credit, market and
operational, ALM, country, etc. Considers credit and market risks
operational risks
Customized to institution’s risk By definition, comparable across Applies same capitalization standard to
tolerance banks; limited value in the comparison all banks; hence comparable
Basel II is expected to lead to greater alignment between economic capital and regulatory
capital
AIRB Credit Risk – Key Requirements
Qualification Requirements - Overview
MINIMUM
REQUIREMENTS
• Netting
– Master netting agreements (OTC derivatives, repos, etc.)
– On-balance sheet deposit netting
• Securitization*
– Traditional, synthetic
Portfolio Management – Regulatory Capital Relief via Credit
Derivative Hedging
• Types of eligible credit derivatives for capital relief
– Single name CDS
– Nth to default CDS
– Total Return Swaps (TRS)
• Credit Derivative eligibility requirements summary
– Legal enforceability in the relevant jurisdiction
– Explicit, irrevocable and unconditional contracts
– Full or pro-rata coverage of contractual payments
– Inclusion of relevant credit events (failure to pay, bankruptcy, etc.)
– Net income/credit losses accounting requirements for TRS
– Protection provider eligibility (e.g. highly rated financial firms for double
default treatment)
– Application of haircuts: currency, maturity, restructuring
– Monitoring of wrong way, concentration and liquidity risks
Portfolio Management – Regulatory Capital Relief via Credit
Derivative Hedging
• CDS Hedging Process and Data Implications
– Assignment of CDS eligibility flags
– Linkage to reference obligors and assets
– Determination of net positions at reference obligor level
– Identification and matching of internal and external hedges
– Determination of qualifying capital hedges (PD substitution, double default,
etc.)
– Maximization of capital relief through ‘optimal’ allocation of hedges
– Systematic identification and assessment of wrong-way, liquidity risks, etc.
– Lack of systematic access to legal agreement information (e.g. legal
enforceability flags, etc.)
Portfolio Management – Regulatory Capital Relief via Credit
Derivative Hedging
• CDS Hedging Example – Capital Calculations under Basel
II (double default approach)
Exposure Credit Derivative
PD 0.08% 0.02%
ELGD 45% 40%
Assumptions Instrument Type Term Loan CDS
Amount (USD) 1,500,000 1,500,000
Term (yrs) 4 3
Currency USD EUR
No restructuring
Contract Terms N/A
Immediate Pay-out
• If underlying loan level data is not available (or its quality is questionable), the
Data Availability
Supervisory Formula cannot be used
• The Bank can choose dollar-for-dollar deduction of unrated exposures that are
Materiality immaterial in size rather than sourcing and maintaining the required data for
SF approach.
Major Pain Points & Challenges
Complexity of Basel II Implementation is Compounded by a
Multiple Touchpoints and Dependencies
Risk Rating Risk Problem Collateral Economic CDS Hedging Country Risk
Systems Analytics Asset Mgt Mgt Capital Process Mgt
R Retail
Scoring
Retail
Segmentation
OTC
Derivatives
Structured
Products
Guarantees
Legal Netting
Rules
Deposit
Systems
E A
Q T
DA
Business Process Data Quality Credit to Finance Governance, Oversight Regulatory Fin.
Design & Integrity Reconciliations & Controls Accounting Acctg
U
I
Information Flows Data & Information Legal Entity Rules Supervisory Private Equity
R
& Controls Modeling
T A
Interpretation Processes Investments
DA
Credit MIS Reference Technology Multi-jurisdictional Regulatory Internal Reviews
E Design Data Mgt Program Mgt solution design Review and Audit
E
Architecture
– Logical,
Transactions
Systems T A Mgt
Systems
Data
Maintenance
Data Privacy &
Secrecy Laws
Change Management,
Communication and
DA
and Mgt. Training
Physical and
N Application Regulatory Compliance Processes
T Structured
Operational Loss
Data, Measurement
Internal Audit,
Validation and
Reporting Systems: RWA Calculation
S Finance Financial, Risk Mgt. Engine Design & and Modeling Compliance Testing
Programs
Systems and Regulatory Implementation
BANK FUNCTIONS
Regulatory Operational Technology Corporate Derivatives
LOB Credit Policy
Reporting Risk Mgt & Operations Treasury Technology
• • Largest
Largestbanks
banks(and
(andexperts)
experts)under
under • • Project
Project Management
ManagementLessons
Lessons
estimated
estimated the complexity (andcosts)
the complexity (and costs) 1.1.Top
TopDown
Downwith
withan
anend
endtotoend
endview
view
• • Excessive
Excessivefocus
focuson
onsome
somenarrow
narrowareas
areas 2.2.Structured
StructuredApproach
Approach
• • 80/20 solutionsfor
80/20solutions forBasel
BaselIIIIwill
willnot
notwork –– Clear
work Cleardefinition
definitionofofownership
ownershipand
and
• • Current accountability
CurrentRisk
RisktotoFinance
Financereconciliation
reconciliation accountability
–– Balance
processes
processes untenable underBasel
untenable under BaselIIII Balance“Risk”
“Risk”vs.
vs.“Finance”
“Finance”roles
roles
–– Detailed
• • Limited
Limitedapplicability
applicabilityofofvendor
vendorsolutions
solutions Detailedproject
projectplanning
planning
• • Project 3.3.Coordination
Coordinationand
andCommunication
Communication
ProjectManagement
Management––Single SingleBiggest
Biggest
–– Front
Challenge
Challenge Frontoffice,
office,middle
middleoffice
officeand
andback
backoffice
office
–– Involvement
• • Linear
Linearapproach
approach Involvementofofappropriate
appropriateconstituents
constituents
• • Traditional • • Integrity
Integrityof
ofthe
theInformation
InformationArchitecture
Architecture
TraditionalPMO
PMOpoint
pointofofview
view oror
• • Excessive • • Credit
CreditMIS
MISDesign
Designand
andData
DataModel
Model
Excessivereliance
relianceononRisk
RiskAnalysts
Analyststoto
drive
drivePMO
PMO • • Qualification
Qualification“data”
“data”vs.
vs.computation
computation
• • Limited “data” attributes
“data” attributes
Limitedsuccess
successininleveraging
leveragingEconomic
Economic
Capital systems for operational
Capital systems for operational • • Operating
OperatingModel
Model- -regulatory
regulatoryprocess
process
implementation
implementation and governance
and governance
Surprise • • Revisit
Revisitshort
shortcuts
cutsfrom
fromprior
priormerger
merger
“integration” projects
“integration” projects
Exploring role of Economic Capital systems/processes in
Basel II Implementation
• Role and Contribution of Economic Capital Systems
– Drives consistency in risk definitions and risk measurement approaches
• Create a level playing field to assess businesses and activities affected by
different risk forms
– Incorporates Bank’s risk tolerance objectives in capital measure
– Brings focus and attention to “first order” data elements required for
quantification
– PD, LGD, EAD data histories and calibration
• Have proven very valuable starting point for Basel II
• Serves as the foundation for RAROC, value based performance
management and strategic decision support
– Primary role is management reporting
• The 80/20 rule works for economic capital
– Provides directionally correct and reasonably consistent results to support
key decision making
Limited success in leveraging economic capital systems for
Basel II “operational” implementation
• From a process and controls perspective, most bank economic capital systems
would be considered “immature” or ad hoc
– Systems were not designed and developed with a view to support external or
regulatory reporting
– Focus has been on methodology, analytics and assumptions, not so much on
controls, review, reconciliation and documentation
– “data” was considered good enough for risk modeling
• Minimum Basel II qualification criteria were never focus of economic capital
systems
– Risk ratings systems, corporate governance and oversight, credit process and
policies, etc.
• Basel II regulatory view of risk continues to differ from economic capital view in
several areas
– Securitizations, repo-style transactions, credit hedging, OTC derivatives
– In many aspects, regulatory model would be a simplification of EC model
• Pillar II (supervisory review) and Pillar III (reporting/disclosure)
Transition From Logical Model to Physical Model…..
securitizations
obligor PK,I1 securitizations_id
portfolio PK,I1 obligor_id
spe_id derivatives
credit_enhancement
PK portfolio_type obligor_name expected_maturity
provisions probability_default_obligor PK credit_enhancment_id currency_code PK derivative_id
int_portfolio asset_class early_amortization_flag
RWA_expected_loss int_asset_class FK1 securitizations_id early_am_controlled_flag FK2 securitizations_id
RWA_unexpected_loss SDBC_exemption_flag tranche_id early_am_uncommitted_flag spe_id
asset_class tier_2_Limit standalone_grade spe_id early_am_retail_flag derivative_counterparty_id
int_asset_class allowance_gen default_grade credit_enhancement_provider_id excess_spread_trapping_point derivative_counterparty_rating
allowance_spec_cha obligor_grade credit_enhancement_provider_rating early_amortization_trigger notional_amount
prov_portfolio borrower_group_size credit_enhancement_seniority 3_month_average_excess_spread e_swap_m2m
prov_def_surpl borrower_group_total_assets e_ccf_credit_enhancement clean_up_call_indicator add_on_factor
borrower_group_turnover credit_enhancement_maturity clean_up_call_exercise_point derivative_maturity
bank_chosen_formula
m
fmi_securitization
facility
PK facility_id
facility_maturity_date
facility_start_date
facility_term_out_date
securitization_tranche
PK,I4 tranche_id
outstanding
cashflow
FK1,I1,I3 securitizations_id
PK,FK6 obligor_id
PK,I1 cashflow_id e_tranche
PK,I2 outstanding_id
bank_interest_in_tranche
FK1,I3,I2 outstanding_id exposure_seniority
FK1,I3,I1 outstanding_haircuts_id
fees_cashflow individual_tranche_rating
FK4 netting_id
interest_cashflow tranche_of_interest
FK5 facility_id
principal_cashflow nominal_exposure
cashflow_period notional_principal_amount
FK1 obligor_id add_on_derivative_type
exposure_repo liquidity_facility
replacement_cost PK liquidity_facility_id
exposure_abs_net_position
exposure_abs_net_fx program_wide_flag
outstanding_currency FK2 securitizations_id
reporting_date FK1 tranche_id
valuation_type spe_id
oustanding haircuts short_term_exposure_type liquidity_provider_id
residual_value_risk_flag liquidity_facility_rating
PK,I1 outstanding_haircuts_id residual_lease_value eligible_liquidity_facility
LPperiod-t eligible_liquidity_facility_md_flag
internal_haircut_flag
Dfactor-t liquidity_facility_seniority
internal_exposure_haircut fair_value_lease
internal_currency_haircut liquidity_facility_line_amount
effective_maturity e_ccf_liquidity_facility
issue_rating_of_debt_security_outstanding t_derivative
rating_agency_outstanding liquidity_facility_maturity
loss_given_default
instrument_type_outstanding LGD_Business_type
issuer_type_outstanding EAD
c_percent_pool
rwa_outstanding
crm_haircuts FK3,I6 securitizations_id
FK2,I7 tranche_id
PK,I1 crm_haircuts_id netting
partial_write_off
PK netting_id specific_provision
days_between_remargining
defaulted_assets_flag
rating_agency_collateral
netting_enforceable specialised_lending_eligibility_flag
issue_rating_of_debt_security_collateral
netting_contract VaR backtest_exception
instrument_type_collateral
net_exposure VaR flag
issuer_type_collateral
securitization_purchase_discount
transaction_type
bank_holding_period
internal_collateral_haircut
bank_holding_period_haircut deposit
PK,I5 deposit_id
FK2,I2,I3 exposure_id
deposit
net_ag_flag_d
deposit_maturity_date
FK1,I1,I4 crm_haircuts_id
deposit_currency
crm FK2 obligor_id
I2 crm_id
FK2,I4,I6 outstanding_id
FK1,I3,I1 crm_haircuts_id
FK3,I5,I8 protection_provider_id
loss_given_default
probability_default
rwa_crm_portion
crm_currency
collateral_type
crm_term_out_date
allocated_exposure
cash_flag
gold_flag
senior_debt_flag
liquidity_approved
I7 index_id
ucits_flag
mutual_funds_flag protection_provider
Basel II Credit Risk Logical Data Model
daily_price_flag PK,I1 protection_provider_id
CRM_type
credit_derivative_type protection_provider_name
collateral_amount
credit_protection_value
supervisory_input_OC
guarantor_type
standalone_grade_protection_provider Last Update: 02 October 2003
rating_protection_provider
exchange_id default_grade_protection_provider
FK4 tranche_id
FK2 obligor_id
collateral_fair_value
Outstandings Data Asset Securitization
Obligor Provisions
Credit Risk Mitigation
This diagram illustrates attribute groupings and high-level relationships. These will be fully
defined in the Analyse Phase.
…is Uncovering Significant Credit Data Issues
Retail banking, and secured residential real Non-investment grade corporate lending,
estate lending, esp. residential mortgages sub-prime retail lending, project finance and
lease finance
Investment-grade corporate lending
Lending to emerging markets (perhaps
excluding “advanced” ones)
Lending against financial assets and
collateralized lending Significant equity investments; equity
investments to hedge funds
Short-term lending – i.e. trade finance Operationally intensive businesses – asset
management, clearing, trust and custody
Hedged (CDS) or guaranteed credit Prime brokerage (business with hedge
exposures funds)
Credit card ABS programs or conduit
facilities
Potential trends
• Greater alignment between EC and Regulatory capital
– Some unintended consequences are possible
– Possible integration for management reporting
– Fewer opportunities for capital arbitrage
• Data Quality improvement
– Reduced noise in credit data
– Consistency
– Greater objectivity in credit assessment
• Improved AQ and Concentration reporting
• Streamlined regulatory reporting process
Competitive Landscape
• A-IRB banks vs. Basel 1A banks
• Banks vs. unregulated finance companies
• US vs. European banks
– Leverage ratio requirement
– Adoption timing differences
• Impact on average capital levels for banks
– 1. Markets
– 2. Markets
– 3. Markets
– 4. Rating agencies
– 5. Regulatory minimum requirements
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