Basel IV: Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB) - KPMG Germany (2024)

Basel IV: Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB) - KPMG Germany (1)

New regulations on capital backing for market price risks in the trading book

New regulations on capital backing for market price risks in the trading book

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Basel IV – Overview

  • Basel IV
  • Basel IV: Capital Floor
  • Basel IV: Credit Valuation Adjustment Risk (CVA)
  • Basel IV: The new Credit Risk Standard Approach (CRSA)
  • > Basel IV: Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB)
  • Basel IV: Large exposures
  • Basel IV: Internal Ratings Based Approach (IRBA)
  • Basel IV: Disclosure
  • Basel IV: Operational risks
  • Basel IV: Standardised Approach for Counterparty Risk (SA-CCR)
  • Basel IV: Securitisation

In January 2016, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) published a new standard for determining the capital requirement for market price risks. Due to ongoing criticism of some key points of the standard, the Basel Committee published a consultation paper in March 2018 - even before the standard came into force - with selective suggestions for improvement, which were received favourably by the industry as a whole. In January 2019, the Basel Committee adopted a revised standard for determining the capital requirement for market price risks, essentially following the consultation paper.

At the European level, the above requirements were incorporated with various adjustments into CRR 2, which came into force on 28 June 2019. However, the amendments to the BCBS standard published shortly before have not yet been reflected. These are to be introduced downstream via delegated acts and regulatory technical standards.

The new regulations within the framework of the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB) include a stricter separation of positions between the trading and banking book, the introduction of a new standardised approach for market price risks as well as revised regulations on the use of internal models. The stricter distinction between trading and banking book is intended to make reallocations between the two books more difficult and thus prevent regulatory capital arbitrage. For this purpose, explicitly designated financial instruments as well as certain listed equity instruments or options are explicitly assigned to the trading book. This allocation can only be deviated from with justification and supervisory approval. The rules proposed by the Basel Committee on the distinction between the trading book and the banking book were not included in CRR 2. However, the requirements for a more restrictive reclassification between the trading and banking book have been adopted and will apply from mid-2023.

Three components to be determined independently

The newly developed standardised approach comprises three components to be determined independently: a sensitivity-based variance-covariance approach for capital backing of "classic" market price risks, furthermore a default risk component for debt and equity positions as well as a surcharge for residual risks, for example for financial instruments with exotic or other underlyings. This approach is accompanied by corresponding disclosure requirements.

Banks with small trading books have the option of using a simplified standardised approach, which is defined as a scaled variant of the existing standardised approach under Basel II. Depending on the type of risk, the capital requirement is scaled to 120 % (for FX risk) to 350 % (for equity risk) of the current value.

When internal models are used, approval will no longer be granted at the bank level, but at the trading desk level. The capital requirements were tightened - among other things by taking into account risk factor-specific liquidity horizons, the introduction of so-called non-modellable risk factors and restrictions on diversification assumptions - and, similar to the standardised approach, result from the sum of three components: an expected shortfall for capital backing of "classic" market price risks, a conservatively designed measure for non-modellable risk factors and a default risk component for debt and equity positions. Furthermore, banks that use internal models to measure market risks must additionally calculate the capital adequacy on a comparative basis using the standardised approach.

Step by step introduction

CRR 2 provides for an FRTB reporting requirement under the standardised approach for banks with material market risk positions for the end of 2020 and a reporting requirement for the results of the internal models approach under FRTB for the beginning of 2023 at the earliest. The capital requirements according to FRTB are to apply four years after CRR 2 comes into force, i.e. in the middle of 2023. This results in considerable implications and need for action for all institutions.

Depending on the individual portfolio, increased capital requirements compared to the status quo are to be expected as a result of the expansion of the trading book allocation. Furthermore, for small and medium-sized banks, the changed trading and banking book allocation may lead to the thresholds for the simplified treatment of market price risks being exceeded. In addition, even the standard approach results in significantly higher requirements for the granularity of the data as well as increased methodological complexity. For internal models, the organisational effort for application or for ongoing operation increases significantly.

KPMG has extensive experience at the interface between risk measurement, supervisory law and trading and IT. Our advisory services include carrying out simulations of the future capital requirement as well as designing calculations according to the selected capital approaches and their implementation and integration into the regulatory reporting system.

Further Information (in German only)

Your contacts

MatthiasPeter Partner, Financial ServicesKPMG AG Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft

+49 69 9587-1649 MatthiasPeterPhone number

+49 69 9587-1649 MatthiasPeter Phone number

Email matthiaspeter@kpmg.com

FranzLorenz Director, Financial ServicesKPMG AG Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft

+49 89 9282-4542 FranzLorenzPhone number

+49 89 9282-4542 FranzLorenz Phone number

Email florenz@kpmg.com

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Basel IV – Overview

  • Basel IV
  • Basel IV: Capital Floor
  • Basel IV: Credit Valuation Adjustment Risk (CVA)
  • Basel IV: The new Credit Risk Standard Approach (CRSA)
  • > Basel IV: Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB)
  • Basel IV: Large exposures
  • Basel IV: Internal Ratings Based Approach (IRBA)
  • Basel IV: Disclosure
  • Basel IV: Operational risks
  • Basel IV: Standardised Approach for Counterparty Risk (SA-CCR)
  • Basel IV: Securitisation
Basel IV: Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB) - KPMG Germany (2024)

FAQs

What are the key points of Basel 4? ›

These covered the quantity and quality of capital that banks should hold, the introduction of a minimum leverage ratio, two new minimum liquidity ratios (the LCR and the NSFR), a tougher capital treatment of securitisations, and the use of the counter cyclical capital buffer as a macro-prudential tool.

What is the FRTB summary? ›

The Fundamental Review of the Trading Book is an international standard that sets out rules governing capital banks must hold against market risk exposures.

What is the FRTB in Basel? ›

The Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB) is a comprehensive suite of capital rules developed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) as part of Basel III, intended to be applied to banks' wholesale trading activities.

Has Basel 4 been implemented? ›

Basel IV is the informal name for a set of proposed international banking reforms that began implementation on Jan. 1, 2023, and are expected to take five years to fully implement.

How does Basel 4 affect banks? ›

Finalized Basel III (also known as Basel IV) increases banks' regulatory capital and reduces free capital. At the same time, the banking industry faces a decrease in profitability.

Why is Basel so important? ›

Basel is commonly considered to be the cultural capital of Switzerland and the city is famous for its many museums, including the Kunstmuseum, which is the first collection of art accessible to the public in the world (1661) and the largest museum of art in Switzerland, the Fondation Beyeler (located in Riehen), the ...

What is the final rule of the FRTB? ›

The final rule includes a framework, known as the Building Block Approach, that builds on existing state-based insurance requirements, accounts for risks that are specific to the business of insurance, and is different from the calculations used for bank capital requirements.

How will the FRTB affect banks? ›

FRTB significantly influences the calculation of capital requirements for market risk. Banks must hold capital that more accurately reflects the actual risk in their trading books.

What is FRTB standard method? ›

FRTB was created to ensure that regulatory market risk models deliver reliable capital outcomes and promote consistent implementation of the standards across jurisdictions.

How to learn Basel 4? ›

Introduction To Basel IV Training - India
  1. Learn about the trading book or banking book in Basel IV.
  2. Understand the use of Credit Valuation Adjustment (CVA) to address risks.
  3. Become familiar with the revised standardised approach for market price risks.

Does the US follow Basel? ›

The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS), on which the United States serves as a participating member, developed international regulatory capital standards through a number of capital accords and related publications, which have collectively been in effect since 1988.

What is Tier 1 capital for a bank? ›

Tier 1 capital refers to the core capital held in a bank's reserves and is used to fund business activities for the bank's clients. It includes common stock, as well as disclosed reserves and certain other assets.

What is the main focus of the Basel I accord? ›

Basel I primarily focuses on credit risk and risk-weighted assets (RWA). It classifies an asset according to the level of risk associated with it.

What is step in risk Basel IV? ›

Step-in risk (BCBS 398)

New concept where step-in risk is the risk that a bank may provide financial support to an entity beyond or in the absence of any contractual obligations, should the entity experience financial stress.

What is the difference between Basel III and Basel IV? ›

Basel IV Explained

It builds upon the previous Basel III framework and introduces several key changes and enhancements to strengthen the global banking system. The Basel IV will improve risk management practices, increase capital requirements, and promote consistency in measuring and reporting banks' risk exposures.

What are the three pillars of the Basel Accord? ›

The Basel II Accord intended to protect the banking system with a three-pillared approach: minimum capital requirements, supervisory review and enhanced market discipline.

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