IFRS 13 and Procyclical: Difference between pages

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International Financial Reporting Standard 13, dealing with fair value measurements.
1.


Issued by the International Accounting Standards Board.  
In [[business cycle]] theory and finance, any economic quantity that is positively correlated with the overall state of the economy.  


Any quantity that tends to increase when the overall economy is growing.
2.
The additional amplification effects resulting from the structure of the financial system.
The performance of banks tends to be procyclical. They thrive when the economy is strong, and suffer disproportionately when the general economy is weak.
This is a problem, because it can amplify financial instability.
Basel III sought to address the problem of the procyclicality of the largest banks' capital, by requiring them to hold countercyclical capital buffers.


== See also ==
*[[Expected cash flow]]
* [[Fair value]]
* [[Fair value hierarchy]]
* [[FVTOCI]]
* [[FVTPL]]
* [[International Accounting Standards Board]]


The opposite of procyclical is ''countercyclical''.


==Other resources==
*[https://www.iasplus.com/en/standards/ifrs/ifrs13 IFRS 13 - IAS Plus]
*[https://www.ifrs.org/content/dam/ifrs/publications/pdf-standards/english/2022/issued/part-a/ifrs-13-fair-value-measurement.pdf?bypass=on IFRS 13 text - IFRS]


[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
== See also ==
* [[Bank]]
* [[Basel III]]
* [[Buffer]]
* [[Capital]]
* [[Capital buffer]]
* [[Countercyclical]]
* [[Countercyclical buffer]]
* [[Cyclical]]
* [[Economy]]
* [[Procyclicality]]
* [[Prudential]]
* [[Supervision]]
* [[Total Loss Absorbing Capacity]]


[[Category:Compliance_and_audit]]
[[Category:Manage_risks]]
[[Category:The_business_context]]

Latest revision as of 08:48, 1 December 2023

1.

In business cycle theory and finance, any economic quantity that is positively correlated with the overall state of the economy.

Any quantity that tends to increase when the overall economy is growing.


2.

The additional amplification effects resulting from the structure of the financial system.

The performance of banks tends to be procyclical. They thrive when the economy is strong, and suffer disproportionately when the general economy is weak.

This is a problem, because it can amplify financial instability.

Basel III sought to address the problem of the procyclicality of the largest banks' capital, by requiring them to hold countercyclical capital buffers.


The opposite of procyclical is countercyclical.


See also