Sunday 25 December 2011

Basel rules from 2013

(Published in the Star Biz Foreign News 20th December 2011 page 10)


Banks worldwide will have to use common format for capital disclosures
LONDON: Banks across the world will have to use a common format for disclosing the size and quality of their capital safety buffers from 2013 to help reassure investors they are stable.
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, made up of regulators from nearly 30 countries, including the United States, China, Japan and large European Union countries, published draft disclosure templates yesterday for public consultation.
In the run up to the financial crisis, it was hard for regulators and investors to compare capital buffers of banks.
“It is often suggested that lack of clarity on the quality of capital contributed to uncertainty during the financial crisis,” the Swiss-based Basel Committee said in a statement.
“Furthermore, the interventions carried out by the authorities may have been more effective if capital positions of the banks were more transparent,” the committee said.
The requirement to fully disclose details of capital buffers was enshrined in the Basel III accord which will force banks to hold more capital and liquidity from 2013. Banks will have to comply with disclosure rules from the date of publication of their first set of financial statements on or after Jan 1, 2013.
They will be required to publish updated data each time they publish financial statements, which for big banks is typically on a quarterly basis.
Lenders would also have to update disclosures whenever a new capital instrument is issued and included in capital buffers.
The Basel III accord will require banks to hold at least 7% of core Tier 1 capital in the form of retained earnings or pure equity.
Regulators and markets have already forced banks to hold well above the planned minimum that is not due to take full effect until the start of 2019. Banks are already disclosing their capital levels in a bid to reassure jittery investors. - Reuters

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