Mark-to-market valuation
An agency apart
The Financial Services Agency has more than its share of critics, thanks to controversial regulations and its handling of the banking crisis. A senior official at the agency talks about what lies ahead.
Legal risk optimisation
Allen & Overy's Carolyn Jackson discusses the importance of a quantitative approach to legal risk.
National regulators able to ‘opt out’ of Basel II maturity treatment
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, the architect of Basel II, has climbed down from its initial plans to force banks to include a full maturity adjustment on capital allocated against risk of defaulting loans, in its proposed mark-to-market…
The maturity effect on credit risk capital
In a mark-to-market approach to credit risk capital, ratings or spread volatility has the effect of making longer-maturity loans more capital-intensive. This is incorporated in the current Basel II proposals via a maturity adjustment factor. Arguing that…
FASB reverses on loan commitments
The US Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) has ruled that undrawn loan commitments will not be subject to derivatives accounting rules and do not have to be marked-to-market – a victory for commercial lenders.
Linear, yet attractive, Contour
Banks’ Potential Future Exposure models are at the core of the advanced EAD (Exposure At Default) approach to capital requirements for credit risk considered in the New Basel Capital Accord. Juan Cárdenas, Emmanuel Fruchard and Jean-François Picron look…
In search of clarity and focus
Greater precision is needed in defining operational risk, but the Basle regulators' latest thoughts are lost in generalities, says Jacques Pézier, in the final article of a three-part series.
Wrestling with Basel II
The revisions to the Basel Accord have enormous implications for Japan, a nation with a banking system still getting to grips with non-performing loans and the impact of mark-to market accounting rules. Anthony Rowley reports from Tokyo.
Why Basel must brush-up on credit
Paul Kupiec of the International Monetary Fund argues that unresolved calibration problems remain with the new Basel Accord’s credit risk capital requirements – problems that may lead banks to make damaging risk decisions.