The Basel ii
Accord
From the Basel ii Compliance Professionals Association (BCPA)
the largest association of Basel ii Professionals in the
world
4. On-balance sheet
netting
188. Where a bank,
(a) has a well-founded
legal basis for concluding that the netting or
offsetting agreement s enforceable in each relevant
jurisdiction regardless of whether the counterparty
is insolvent or bankrupt;
(b) is able at any time
to determine those assets and liabilities with the
same counterparty that are subject to the netting
agreement;
(c) monitors and controls its
roll-off risks; and
(d) monitors and controls the
relevant exposures on a net basis, it may use the net
exposure of loans and deposits as the basis for its
capital adequacy calculation in accordance with the
formula in paragraph 147.
Assets (loans) are treated
as exposure and liabilities (deposits) as collateral.
The haircuts will be zero except when a currency
mismatch exists.
A 10-business day holding period will
apply when daily mark-tomarket is conducted and all
the requirements contained in paragraphs 151, 169, and
202 to 205 will apply.
5. Guarantees and credit
derivatives
(i) Operational
requirements
Operational requirements common to
guarantees and credit derivatives
189. A guarantee
(counter-guarantee) or credit derivative must represent
a direct claim on the protection provider and must be
explicitly referenced to specific exposures or a pool
of exposures, so that the extent of the cover is
clearly defined and incontrovertible.
Other
than non-payment by a protection purchaser of money
due in respect of the credit protection contract it
must be irrevocable; there must be no clause in the
contract that would allow the protection provider
unilaterally to cancel the credit cover or that would
increase the effective cost of cover as a result of
deteriorating credit quality in the hedged exposure. *
It must also be unconditional; there should be no
clause in the protection contract outside the
direct control of the bank that could prevent the
protection provider from being obliged to pay out
in a timely manner in the event that the original
counterparty fails to make the payment(s)
due.
*
Note that the irrevocability condition does not require
that the credit protection and the exposure be maturity
matched; rather that the maturity agreed ex ante may not
be reduced ex post by the protection provider.
Paragraph 203 sets forth the treatment of call options
in determining remaining maturity for credit protection.
Additional operational requirements for
guarantees
190. In addition to the legal certainty
requirements in paragraphs 117 and 118 above,
in order for a guarantee to be recognised, the
following conditions must be satisfied:
(a) On the
qualifying default/non-payment of the counterparty, the
bank may in a timely manner pursue the guarantor for
any monies outstanding under the documentation
governing the transaction.
The guarantor may make one
lump sum payment of all monies under such
documentation to the bank, or the guarantor may
assume the future payment obligations of the
counterparty covered by the guarantee.
The bank must
have the right to receive any such payments from the
guarantor without first having to take legal actions in
order to pursue the counterparty for payment.
(b)
The guarantee is an explicitly documented obligation
assumed by the guarantor.
(c) Except as noted in the
following sentence, the guarantee covers all types
of payments the underlying obligor is expected to
make under the documentation governing the
transaction, for example notional amount, margin
payments etc.
Where a guarantee covers payment of
principal only, interests and other uncovered
payments should be treated as an unsecured amount in
accordance with paragraph 198.
Additional
operational requirements for credit derivatives
191.
In order for a credit derivative contract to be
recognised, the following conditions must be
satisfied:
(a) The credit events specified by the
contracting parties must at a minimum cover:
•
failure to pay the amounts due under terms of the
underlying obligation that are in effect at the time
of such failure (with a grace period that is closely in
line with the grace period in the underlying
obligation);
• bankruptcy, insolvency or inability of
the obligor to pay its debts, or its failure
or admission in writing of its inability generally to
pay its debts as they become due,and analogous
events; and
• restructuring of the underlying
obligation involving forgiveness or postponement of
principal, interest or fees that results in a credit
loss event (i.e. charge-off, specific provision or
other similar debit to the profit and loss account).
When restructuring is not specified as a credit
event, refer to paragraph 192.
(b) If the credit
derivative covers obligations that do not include the
underlying obligation, section (g) below governs
whether the asset mismatch is permissible.
(c) The
credit derivative shall not terminate prior to
expiration of any grace period required for a default
on the underlying obligation to occur as a result of a
failure to pay, subject to the provisions of
paragraph 203.
(d) Credit derivatives allowing for
cash settlement are recognised for capital purposes
insofar as a robust valuation process is in place in
order to estimate loss reliably.
There must be a
clearly specified period for obtaining
post-creditevent valuations of the underlying
obligation.
If the reference obligation specified in
the credit derivative for purposes of cash settlement is
different than the underlying obligation, section (g)
below governs whether the asset mismatch
is permissible.
(e) If the protection purchaser’s
right/ability to transfer the underlying obligation
to the protection provider is required for
settlement, the terms of the underlying obligation
must provide that any required consent to such transfer
may not be unreasonably withheld.
(f) The identity
of the parties responsible for determining whether a
credit event has occurred must be clearly defined.
This determination must not be the
sole responsibility of the protection seller.
The
protection buyer must have the right/ability to
inform the protection provider of the occurrence of a
credit event.
(g) A mismatch between the underlying
obligation and the reference obligation under the
credit derivative (i.e. the obligation used for purposes
of determining cash settlement value or the
deliverable obligation) is permissible if (1)
the reference obligation ranks pari passu with or is
junior to the underlying obligation, and (2) the
underlying obligation and reference obligation share
the same obligor (i.e. the same legal entity) and
legally enforceable cross-default
or cross-acceleration clauses are in place.
(h) A
mismatch between the underlying obligation and the
obligation used for purposes of determining whether a
credit event has occurred is permissible if (1) the
latter obligation ranks pari passu with or is junior to
the underlying obligation, and (2) the underlying
obligation and reference obligation share the
same obligor (i.e. the same legal entity) and legally
enforceable cross-default or
crossacceleration clauses are in place.
192.
When the restructuring of the underlying obligation is
not covered by the credit derivative, but the other
requirements in paragraph 191 are met, partial
recognition of the credit derivative will be allowed.
If the amount of the credit derivative is less than or
equal to the amount of the underlying obligation, 60%
of the amount of the hedge can be recognised as
covered. If the amount of the credit derivative is
larger than that of the underlying obligation, then
the amount of eligible hedge is capped at 60% of the
amount of the underlying obligation. *
*
The 60% recognition factor is provided as an interim
treatment, which the Committee intends to refine prior
to implementation after considering additional data.
93. Only
credit default swaps and total return swaps that provide
credit protection equivalent to guarantees will be
eligible for recognition. The following exception
applies.
Where a bank buys credit protection through
a total return swap and records the net payments
received on the swap as net income, but does not record
offsetting deterioration in the value of the asset
that is protected (either through reductions in fair
value or by an addition to reserves), the credit
protection will not be recognised.
The treatment of
first-todefault and second-to-default products is
covered separately in paragraphs 207 to 210.
194.
Other types of credit derivatives will not be eligible
for recognition at this time. *
*
Cash funded credit linked notes issued by the bank
against exposures in the banking book which fulfil the
criteria for credit derivatives will be treated as cash
collateralised transactions.
(ii) Range of
eligible guarantors (counter-guarantors)/protection
providers
195. Credit protection given by the
following entities will be recognised:
• sovereign
entities,* PSEs, banks ** and securities firms with a
lower risk weight than the counterparty;
• other
entities rated A- or better. This would include credit
protection provided by parent, subsidiary and
affiliate companies when they have a lower risk weight
than the obligor.
* This
includes the Bank for International Settlements, the
International Monetary Fund, the European Central
Bank and the European Community, as well as those MDBs
referred to in footnote 24.
** This includes other MDBs
(iii) Risk weights
196. The
protected portion is assigned the risk weight of the
protection provider.
The uncovered portion of the
exposure is assigned the risk weight of the underlying
counterparty.
197. Materiality thresholds on payments
below which no payment is made in the event of loss
are equivalent to retained first loss positions and must
be deducted in full from the capital of the bank
purchasing the credit protection.
Proportional
cover
198. Where the amount guaranteed, or against
which credit protection is held, is less than the
amount of the exposure, and the secured and unsecured
portions are of equal seniority, i.e. the bank and
the guarantor share losses on a pro-rata basis capital
relief will be afforded on a proportional basis: i.e.
the protected portion of the exposure will receive
the treatment applicable to eligible
guarantees/credit derivatives, with the remainder
treated as unsecured.
Tranched cover
199. Where
the bank transfers a portion of the risk of an exposure
in one or more tranches to a protection seller or
sellers and retains some level of risk of the loan and
the risk transferred and the risk retained are of
different seniority, banks may obtain credit
protection for either the senior tranches (e.g.
second loss portion) or the junior tranche (e.g. first
loss portion). In this case the rules as set out in
Section IV (Credit risk ─ securitisation
framework) will apply.
(iv) Currency
mismatches
200. Where the credit protection is
denominated in a currency different from that in
which the exposure is denominated — i.e. there is a
currency mismatch — the amount of the exposure deemed
to be protected will be reduced by the application of a
haircut HFX, i.e.
GA = G x (1 – HFX)
where:
G =
nominal amount of the credit protection
HFX = haircut
appropriate for currency mismatch between the credit
protection and underlying obligation.
The
appropriate haircut based on a 10-business day holding
period (assuming daily markingto- market) will be
applied.
If a bank uses the supervisory haircuts it will
be 8%.
The haircuts must be scaled up using the
square root of time formula, depending on the frequency
of revaluation of the credit protection as described
in paragraph 168.
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