Three Pillars of Capital: Difference between revisions
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''Banking - regulation - capital adequacy | ''Banking - regulation - capital adequacy''. | ||
The Three Pillars of Capital is a concept introduced by Basel II. | The Three Pillars of Capital is a concept introduced by Basel II. | ||
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* [[Market risk]] | * [[Market risk]] | ||
* [[Operational risk]] | * [[Operational risk]] | ||
* [[Pillar 1]] | |||
* [[Pillar 2]] | * [[Pillar 2]] | ||
* [[Pillar 3]] | * [[Pillar 3]] | ||
[[Category:Accounting,_tax_and_regulation]] | |||
[[Category:The_business_context]] |
Latest revision as of 12:31, 2 July 2022
Banking - regulation - capital adequacy.
The Three Pillars of Capital is a concept introduced by Basel II.
- Pillar 1 establishes minimum capital requirements based on market, credit and operational risks, and a minimum leverage ratio.
- Pillar 2 addresses firm-wide governance and risk management, among other matters. Additional capital requirements may be imposed by supervisors under Pillar 2, depending on their evaluation of the individual bank.
- Pillar 3 requires banks to make enhanced disclosures to the market. The idea is that those following better practice will enjoy lower-cost funding from the market, thereby encouraging best practice via 'market discipline'.