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Title: Section 5: Issues in Supervision of International Financial Conglomerates


1
5th Annual International Seminar on Policy
Challenges for the Financial Sector
International Financial Conglomerates Issues
and Challenges
  • Section 5 Issues in Supervision of
    International Financial Conglomerates

Danièle NOUY Secretary General of the French
Banking Commission and Vice-Chair of the
Committee of European Banking Supervisors - CEBS
Washington 2 June 2005
2
Outline
  • I - The Committee of European Banking
    Supervisors (CEBS) role and tasks
  • II - The objectives of financial conglomerates
    supervision
  • III - The European framework

3
I CEBS role and tasks
  • The Committee of European Banking Supervisors
    (CEBS) is in charge of the efficient and
    consistent implementation of EU banking rules in
    Europe
  • CEBS was established on 5 November 2003 and first
    met in January 2004 its Secretariat is based in
    London
  • It has been created within the  Lamfalussy
    Approach  and is a so-called  Level 3
    Committee
  • It is comprised of supervisory authorities and
    central banks
  • It represents a new, more formalised, and
    efficient banking supervisory framework in
    Europe some kind of EU decentralised banking
    supervisory model.

4
I CEBS role and tasks
  • The Lamfalussy approach
  • Level 1- Legislative framework proposals by the
    Commission to the Council of Ministers and the
    European Parliament for co-decision.
  • Level 2- Implementation measures are defined,
    proposed and decided by the Commission with the
    assistance of level 2 regulatory committees and
    the technical advice received from the level 3
    supervisory committees.
  • Level 3- European supervisors work in close
    cooperation to ensure consistent implementation
    of Level 1 and 2 acts within the Member States
    and to promote convergence of supervisory
    practices.
  • Level 4- The Commissions enforcement of
    Community law.

5
I CEBS role and tasks

CEBS and the Lamfalussy framework
6
I CEBS role and tasks
  • The CEBS organisation
  • CEBS members are high level representatives from
    the banking supervisory authorities and central
    banks of the European Union, including the
    European Central Bank.
  • The CEBS is comprised of 25 member countries and
    46 member organisations, observers from EEA
    countries, the European Commission and the
    Banking Supervision Committee of ESCB (European
    System of Central Banks).
  • Chairman - José María RoldánSecretary General -
    Andrea Enria
  • Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and soon Romania
    and Bulgaria.

7
I CEBS role and tasks
  • The institutional tasks of CEBS
  • To advise the European Commission on banking
    policy issues, in particular for the preparation
    of draft measures for the implementation of
    European legislation
  • To foster the consistent implementation of the
    Directives and to the convergence of supervisory
    practices
  • To promote supervisory co-operation and exchange
    of supervisory information.

8
II The objectives of conglomerates supervision
  • To take better into account the increasing
    complexity of financial groups
  • To implement internationally agreed principles
  • To address risks not captured in traditional
    sectoral supervision

9
II The objectives of conglomerates supervision
  • 1- To take better into account the increasing
    complexity of financial groups
  • Some groups provide financial services pertaining
    to the 3 financial sectors bank, insurance,
    investment services
  • The magnitude of possible problems is
    particularly important, when such groups are
    cross-border EU or international groups
  • The risks of such cross-sector groups are not
    adequately captured in traditional sectoral
    supervision
  • Concerns about cross-sectoral risk transfers, and
    possible regulatory arbitrage have increased
    recently.

10
II The objectives of conglomerates supervision
2 - To implement internationally agreed principles
  • Supervision of financial conglomerates (Joint
    Forum, February 1999)
  • Risk concentration principles (Joint Forum,
    December 1999)
  • Intra-group transactions and exposures principles
    (Joint Forum, December 1999)
  • Trends in risk integration and aggregation (Joint
    Forum, August 2003)
  • Credit risk transfers (Joint Forum, March 2005).

11
II The objectives of conglomerates supervision
  • 3 - To address risks not captured in traditional
    sectoral supervision
  • Ensure that financial conglomerates have
    sufficient capital basis, without double gearing
    of own funds and unreasonable capital leverage
  • Address intragroup transactions and possible
    excessive concentration of risks
  • Ensure adequate internal control as well risk
    measurement and management across the whole
    group
  • Designate a single  lead coordinator to monitor
    the supervision of the whole group .

12
III The European framework
  1. Definition of an EU financial conglomerate
  2. Designation of competent supervisors
  3. Content of supplementary supervision
  4. Means of supplementary supervision

13
III The European framework
1. Definition of an EU financial conglomerate
  • It is a group,
  • With at least one regulated entity within the
    Group,
  • Which activity is mainly financial,
  • With significant involvement in the
    banking/investment services sector and the
    insurance sector.

14
III The European framework
  • 1. Definition of an EU financial conglomerate
  • It is a  Group 
  • Meaning a parent-subsidiary relationship
    (including participations) or
  • An horizontal structure.
  • Or a  Sub-Group 
  • A financial conglomerate may be a sub-group of
    another financial conglomerate
  • In such cases, they are in principle both subject
    to supplementary supervision but possibility to
    waive supplementary supervision at sub-group
    level.

15
III The European framework
  • Definition of an EU financial conglomerate
  • With  at least one regulated entity 
    within the Group
  • A bank ( credit institution ), or a securities
    firm/broker dealer ( investment firm ), or an
    insurance company,
  • With its head office in the EU.

16
III The European framework
  • Definition of a financial conglomerate
  • The Groups activities must be mainly
    financial

Total balance sheet of the financial sector
entities gt 40 of total consolidated balance
sheet of the whole group.
17
III The European Framework
  • Definition of a financial conglomerate
  • And cross-sector financial activities
    must be significant
  • a) The micro-economic parameter 

The weight of the less important financial sector
must not be less than 10. This is assessed by
comparing the total of the balance sheet and the
capital adequacy requirements of each financial
sector against those of the whole group.
18
III The European Framework
  • Definition of a financial conglomerate
  • Cross-sector financial activities must be
    significant
  • b) The macro-economic parameter
  • The total of the balance sheet of the smallest
    financial sector gt EUR 6 Billions
  • Waiver by relevant competent authorities if
  • - micro-economic parameter 10, and
  • - if not necessary or inappropriate or
    misleading with respect to the supervisory
    objectives.

19
III The European Framework
2. Designation of competent supervisors
  • Current solo supervisors keep exclusive
    responsibility for solo supervision
  • Current sectoral group supervisors keep their
    responsibilities for sectoral supervision at both
    solo and consolidated levels
  • Appointment of a unique lead coordinator for
    conglomerate supervision.

20
III The European Framework
2. Designation of competent supervisors
  • The Lead coordinator is appointed according to
    precise criteria determined by the Directive. In
    practice, most of the time, it is the supervisor
    in charge of the main financial sector
  • Nevertheless, the Directives criteria may be
    waived by the team of the  relevant
    supervisors , when needed
  • The coordinator is assisted by the team of other
    relevant  supervisors.

21
III the European Framework
2. Designation of competent supervisors The
missions and powers of the lead coordinator
consist in
  • Information gathering and dissemination, on an
    on-going basis and in crisis situations
  • Assessment of financial soundness and compliance
    with financial conglomerate regulation
  • Compulsory coordination arrangements
  • But he has no enforcement powers with respect
    to regulated entities located outside his
    jurisdiction.

22
III The European Framework
3. Content of supplementary Supervision
a) Capital adequacy, b) Risk concentration, c)
Intra group transactions, d) Internal control and
risk management requirements.
23
III The European Framework
3. Content of supplementary Supervision
  1. Capital adequacy

The basic principle is that The overall capital
at conglomerate level must be sufficient to meet
the total capital requirements of all entities
within the group after elimination of intragroup
elements.
24
III The European Framework
3. Content of supplementary Supervision
  • Capital adequacy
  • The four methods developed by the Joint Forum in
    1999 can be used
  • accounting consolidation method,
  • deduction aggregation method,
  • book value/requirement deduction method,
  • combination of 2, or all, of methods above.
  • The choice of the method is validated by the lead
    coodinator.

25
III The European Framework
3. Content of supplementary Supervision
  1. Risk concentration
  • There is a group-wide measure of concentration
    risks
  • It comprises all risks, namely credit,
    counterparty, investment, underwriting, market
    risk, etc.
  • It is a qualitive supervision, but discretion
    for quantitative limits,
  • The coordinator role consists in
  • setting limits, according to the risk profile of
    the group,
  • measuring contagion risk/conflicts of
    interests/arbitrage, etc.
  • determining risk categories requiring reporting.

26
III The European Framework
3. Content of supplementary Supervision
c) Intra Group transactions
  • Concept of  important Intra Group Transactions
    - IGTs
  • (gt 5 of minimum capital requirements)
  • Periodic notification of the important IGTs to
    the coordinator
  • Qualitive supervision of the IGTs, but country
    discretion for quantitative limits
  • Coordinator role, similar to his role in risk
    concentration monitoring.

27
III The European Framework
3. Content of supplementary Supervision
  1. Internal control and risk management requirements
  • Sound management processes (adoption and
    periodic assessment by the top management of the
    Groups strategies, policies and risk policy)
  • Capital adequacy policy, appropriate to match the
    conglomerates risk profile and strategy
  • Internal risk measurement and management
    processes commensurate with the conglomerates
    risks
  • Sound internal control mechanisms and accounting
    principles.

28
III The European Framework
4. Means of supplementary Supervision EU
Financial conglomerates
  • Access to information,
  • Cooperation and exchange of information,
  • - Areas of information exchanges are mainly
    groups structures, strategy, acquisitions,
    restructuring, CAD, IGTs, large exposures,
    profitability, shareholders, management, internal
    control systems, materially adverse developments,
    regulatory measures, etc.
  • - Essential information must be shared relevant
    information may be shared.
  • Verification of information,
  • Enforcement.

29
III The European Framework
4. Means of supplementary Supervision
Entities established outside the EU
  • notion of equivalent supervision, and
  • cooperation agreements

30
III The European Framework
4. Means of supplementary Supervision Groups
with a Third Country Parent
  • What needs to be determined? Whether
     appropriate and equivalent  supervisory is in
    place
  • When and by whom? The request is made at the
    initiative of the parent or the regulated entity
    or the coordinator
  • Who determines the possible equivalence? The
    coordinating supervisor decides with the advice
    of other relevant supervisors, and taking into
    account the general guidance issued by the
    Financial Conglomerates Committee in July 2004
    regarding the equivalence of supervision in
    Switzerland and the USA
  • What if no equivalence? In this case, the
    Directive is applied by analogy to the EU parts
    of group and appropriate methods are used to
    capture and measure at least  the sub-groups
    risks  (e.g. require a sub-holding company).
  • .

31
Contact details ChairmanJosé María
RoldánEmail josemaria.roldan_at_c-ebs.orgTel.
44 20 7382 1770 Vice ChairDanièle NouyEmail
daniele.nouy_at_banque-france.frTel. 33 1 4292
7501 Secretary GeneralAndrea EnriaEmail
andrea.enria_at_c-ebs.orgTel. 44 20 7382 1750
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