Title: A Critique of Revised Basel II
1A Critique of Revised Basel II
21. Conclusions
32. XYZ Theory of Regulatory Capital
- Randomness in the economy determined by the
evolution of a set of state variables. - State variables include individual bank
characteristics and business cycle
characteristics (macro-variables).
4The Banks Optimal Capital
- The banks optimal capital level is defined to be
that capital which maximizes shareholders
wealth, independently of regulatory rules. - Banks may or may not know f( . , . ).
- Larger (international) banks yes
- Smaller (regional banks) ???
5Ideal Regulatory Capital
- Regulatory capital is needed due to costly
externalities associated with bank failures. - The ideal regulatory capital is defined to be
that (hypothetical) capital determined as if
regulatory authorities had perfect knowledge
(information). -
- Hypothesis 1 (Costly Externalities)
-
-
-
-
6Ideal Regulatory Capital
7Required Regulatory Capital
- Regulatory authorities specify a rule to
approximate the ideal capital. This is the
required regulatory capital. - Hypothesis 3 ( Approximate Ideal Capital from
Below)
8Required Regulatory Capital
- Justification
- Believed that many banks choose Xt gt Yt for
competitive reasons. Then, under hypothesis 1,
Zt gt Xt gt Yt. - Rule chosen (shown later) is based on asymptotic
theory where idiosyncratic risks are
infinitesimal and diversified away, implies Zt
gt Yt. - Rule chosen (shown later) so that ideally,
probability of failure is less than .001. Implies
A credit rating or better (Moodys). In practice,
required capital does not achieve this level for
many banks, so that for these banks Zt gt Yt.
9Required Regulatory Capital
- Example In revised Basel II, the rule for
required capital is (for illustrative purposes) - Will discuss later in more detail.
10Theorem 1
- Given hypotheses 1 and 2.
- Let
- for j1,,N represent a collection of regulatory
capital rules. - Let hypothesis 3 hold. Then,
- is a better approximation to Zt than any single
rule. - If hypothesis 3 does not hold, then no simple
ordering of regulatory capital rules is possible
without additional structure.
11Theorem 1 - implications
- New rules should be implemented without
discarding existing rules. Implies retention of
leverage based rules (FDICIA) is prudent. - Four year parallel run period with yearly
transitional floors (95, 90,85) within Basel
II revised framework is prudent.
12Theorem 2
- Let hypotheses 1 3 hold.
- Let
- for i 1,,m be the regulatory capital for bank
i, - Then when considering a new rule
13Theorem 2 - implications
- Scaling individual bank capital so that in
aggregate, industry capital does not decline, is
prudent. Current scale is 1.06 based on the 3rd
Quantitative Impact Study. Tentative magnitude. - Requiring that the regulations be
restudied/modified if a 10 reduction in
aggregate capital results after implementation is
prudent.
143. The Revised Basel II Capital Rule
- The following analysis is independent of XYZ
theory. - Revised Basel II rule illustrated on a previous
slide. - In revised Basel II, the risk weightings are
explicitly adjusted for credit risk, operational
risk, and market risk. Liquidity risk is only an
implicit adjustment.
15The Revised Basel II Capital Rule
- Two approaches
- Standard (based on tables and rules given in
revised Basel II framework). - Internal ratings/ Advanced approach (based on
internal models). - For my analysis, concentrate on internal
ratings/advanced approach.
16Credit Risk
- Risk weights determined based on banks internal
estimates of PD, LGD and EAD. - These estimates input into a formula for capital
(K) held for each asset. Capital K based on - Value at Risk (VaR) measure over a 1-year horizon
with a 0.999 confidence level. - Asymptotic single-factor model, with constant
correlation assumption. - An adjustment for an assets maturity.
- Discuss each in turn
17PD, LGD, EAD
- PD is 1-year long term average default
probability - not state dependent.
- LGD is computed based on an economic downturn
- quasi-state dependent.
- EAD is computed based on an economic downturn
- quasi-state dependent.
- These do not change with business cycle.
18PD, LGD, EAD
- Ideal regulatory capital should be state
dependent. - Pro Makes bank failures counter-cyclic.
- Con Makes bank capital pro-cyclic. Could
adversely effect interest rates (investment).
But, monetary authorities have market based tools
to reduce this negative impact.
19Problems with VaR
- Problems with the VaR measure for loss L.
- Well-known that VaR
- ignores distribution of losses beyond 0.999
level, and - penalizes diversification of assets (provides an
incentive to concentrate risk).
20Example Concentrating Risk
VaR(LA) 0 and VaR(L(AB)/2) .50
21Given VaR Portfolio Invariance
- Capital K formulated to have portfolio
invariance, i.e. the required capital for a
portfolio is the sum of the required capital for
component assets. - Done for simplicity of implementation.
- But, it ignores benefits of diversification,
provides an incentive toward concentrating risk.
22Given VaR Single Risk Factor
- The asymptotic model (to get portfolio
invariance) has a single risk factor. - The single risk factor drives the state variables
vector. - Inconsistent with evidence, e.g.
- Duffee 1999 needed 3 factors to fit corporate
bond prices.
23Given VaR Common Correlation
- When implementing the ASRF model, revised Basel
II assumes that all assets are correlated by a
simple function of PD, correlation bounded
between 0.12 and 0.24. - No evidence to support this simplifying
assumption???
24Given VaR Normal Distribution for Losses
- Formula for K implies that losses (returns) are
normally distributed. - Inconsistent with evidence
- Ignores limited liability (should be lognormal)
- Ignores fat tails (stochastic volatility and
jumps)
25Given VaR Maturity Adjustment
- Capital determination based on book values of
assets. - This ignores capital gains/losses on assets over
the 1-year horizon. - Gordy 2003 argues that a maturity adjustment is
necessary to capture downgrades of credit rating
in long-dated assets. - Do not understand. Asset pricing theory has
downgrade independent of maturity. Maturity
(duration) adjustment only (roughly) captures
interest rate risk.
26Significance of Error
- P. Kupiec constructs a model Black/Scholes/Merto
n economy, correlated geometric B.M.s for
assets. Considers a portfolio of zero-coupon
bonds. - Computes ideal capital, compares to revised Basel
II framework capital. - Finds significant differences.
- Conclusion revised Basel II capital rule is a
(very) rough approximation to the ideal rule.
27Operational Risk
- Basic indicator and standard approach capital is
proportional to income flow. - Advanced measurement approach internal models
approach based on VaR, 1-year horizon, 0.999
confidence level. - Jarrow 2005 argues operational risk is of two
types system or agency based. - Income flow captures system type risk.
- Agency risk is not captured by income flow. More
important of the two types. Only possibly
captured in advanced measurement approach.
28Market Risk
- Standardized and internal models approach.
- Concentrate on internal models approach.
- Internal models approach is VaR based with 10-day
holding period and 0.99 confidence level with a
scale factor of 3. - Why the difference from credit risk?
- Could lead to regulatory arbitrage if an asset
could be classified as either.
29Liquidity Risk
- Liquidity risk only included implicitly in
- credit risk (via the LGD, EAD being for an
economic downturn) - market risk (via the scale factor of 3).
- Better and more direct ways of doing this are
available, see Jarrow and Protter 2005.