Global banking watchdog cracks down on big lenders gaming capital rules
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[March 07, 2024] By
Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) -Global banking regulators proposed measures on
Thursday to crack down on "unacceptable" attempts by the world's biggest
banks to game rules in a bid to avoid heavier capital requirements.
About 30 globally systemic banks (G-SIBs), such as JPMorgan, HSBC, BNP
Paribas and Morgan Stanley, must hold more capital than smaller domestic
peers, based on a range of factors, which determines which "bucket" they
are slotted into, and therefore how much extra capital they must hold.
The rules were introduced a decade ago after many lenders were bailed
out by taxpayers in the global financial crisis.
"The proposed revisions aim at constraining banks' ability to lower
their G-SIB scores through window-dressing," the Basel Committee said in
a statement.
The aim is to stop "regulatory arbitrage behaviour" that seeks to
temporarily reduce banks' perceived systemic footprint around the
reference dates used for the reporting and public disclosure of G-SIB
scores.
"This will be achieved by requiring banks participating in the G-SIB
assessment exercise to report and disclose most G-SIB indicators based
on an average of values over the reporting year, rather than year-end
values."
The proposals are out to public consultation until June 7.
"The Committee sees the benefits of a wide application of the revisions
to all banks participating in the G-SIB assessment exercise, but it is
also seeking feedback on options that would apply those changes to a
narrower set of banks to reduce the reporting burden," the committee
said.
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European Central Bank (ECB) headquarters building is seen during
sunset in Frankfurt, Germany, January 5, 2022. REUTERS/Kai
Pfaffenbach
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Basel is proposing a start date of January 2027 for the proposed
changes.
Banking regulators from the world's main financial centers are
members of the Basel Committee and commit to applying agreed rules
in their national handbooks for lenders.
The Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, where
the Committee is based, said in a 2021 paper that up to 13 banks in
the European Union would have faced more intense supervision and
higher capital requirements in the absence of window dressing.
The committee published a study on Thursday on how implementation of
its G-SIB rules have evolved over the past decade, saying it showed
that the banks have seen their role shrink across all categories of
systemic importance.
"G-SIBs appear to have adjusted their balance sheets after the
introduction of the framework," the study said.
(Reporting by Huw Jones;Editing by Alison Williams and Sinead
Cruise)
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