Debt factoring and Risk Weighted Assets: Difference between pages

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The purchasing, normally with recourse to the seller, of accounts receivable as a mechanism for providing short-term finance on a continuing basis.
''Bank supervision - capital adequacy''.


(RWAs).


== See also ==
Risk Weighted Assets provide a measure of the total scale and risk of a regulated bank's activities, against which the bank is required to hold minimum levels of regulatory capital.
* [[Factoring]]
* [[Vendor finance]]


[[Category:Trade_finance]]
 
In simple terms, assets are multiplied by appropriate risk weightings - historically ranging from 0% to 100% depending on the level of risk - and aggregated.
 
Other risks, including operational risk, are also appropriately evaluated and risk weighted, adding additional RWAs to the regulatory total.
 
 
The calculation of RWAs has been increasingly refined over time.
 
Risk weights may, in some cases, be derived from individual banks' own internal risk models, subject to the regulator's approval.
 
Other risk weightings are determined on a standardised basis for all banks.
 
 
==See also==
*[[Bank supervision]]
*[[Capital]]
*[[Capital adequacy]]
*[[CCF]]
*[[Off balance sheet risk]]
*[[Operational risk]]
*[[Pillar 1]]

Revision as of 16:12, 11 November 2016

Bank supervision - capital adequacy.

(RWAs).

Risk Weighted Assets provide a measure of the total scale and risk of a regulated bank's activities, against which the bank is required to hold minimum levels of regulatory capital.


In simple terms, assets are multiplied by appropriate risk weightings - historically ranging from 0% to 100% depending on the level of risk - and aggregated.

Other risks, including operational risk, are also appropriately evaluated and risk weighted, adding additional RWAs to the regulatory total.


The calculation of RWAs has been increasingly refined over time.

Risk weights may, in some cases, be derived from individual banks' own internal risk models, subject to the regulator's approval.

Other risk weightings are determined on a standardised basis for all banks.


See also