Capital adequacy: Difference between revisions
(Correct typo 'implemented'.) |
(Add link.) |
||
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
* [[Central bank]] | * [[Central bank]] | ||
* [[Common equity]] | * [[Common equity]] | ||
* [[Confidence]] | |||
* [[Countercyclical buffer]] | * [[Countercyclical buffer]] | ||
* [[Economic capital]] | * [[Economic capital]] |
Revision as of 22:11, 19 February 2024
1. Bank regulation - capital requirements - Bank for International Settlements (BIS).
Capital adequacy is the system of regulating banks (and other financial institutions) by requiring them to maintain minimum acceptable levels - and types - of capital, adequate to absorb their potential credit losses and other trading losses.
Requirements are laid down internationally by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and implemented and monitored by domestic central banks.
Historically, the BIS capital adequacy standard had been 8%.
Under the Basel III framework this standard was increased (strengthened) substantially - very roughly doubled - and its measurement refined.
2. Insurance & other contexts.
Similar risk management and regulation in other contexts.
For example, insurance companies.
See also
- Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
- Basel II
- Basel 2.5
- Basel III
- Basel III Endgame
- Capital
- Capital Requirements Directive (CRD)
- Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR)
- Central bank
- Common equity
- Confidence
- Countercyclical buffer
- Economic capital
- G-SIB
- GCLAC
- Insurance
- Insurance Capital Standard
- Interest Rate Risk in the Banking Book (IRRBB)
- Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP)
- IRB
- Microprudential
- Own funds
- Pillar 1
- Pillar 2
- Pillar 3
- Primary Loss Absorbing Capital
- Regulatory capital
- Reserve requirements
- Risk Weighted Assets (RWAs)
- Settlement risk
- Slotting
- Solvency II
- Supervision