2. Introduction
• Basel II is a type of recommendations on banking laws
and regulations issued by the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision that was initially published in June
2004.
• The objective of Basel II is to create an international
standard that banking regulators can use when creating
regulations about how much capital banks need to put
aside to guard against the types of financial and
operational risks banks face.
3. Why BASEL II
Basel II much more risk sensitive, as it is aligning capital
requirements to risks of loss. Better risk management in a
bank means bank may be able to allocate less regulatory
capital.
The objective of Basel II is to modernize existing capital
requirements framework to make it more comprehensive
and risk sensitive.
The Basel II framework therefore designed to be more
sensitive to the real risks that firms face than BaselI.
Apart from looking at financial figures, it also considers
operational risks, such as risk of systems breaking down
or people doing the wrong things, and also marketrisk.
4. Three pilars of Basel-ll
Pillars
Minmum
capital
Requirement
Supervisory
review
Market
disiplin and
discloser
5. Pillar-I : Minimum Capital required
• Institution's total regulatory capital must be at least 8%
(ratio same as in Basel I) of its risk weighted assets,
based on measures of THREE RISKS
Credit risk Market risk
Operational
risk
6. Pillar-II Supervisory review.
Covers Supervisory Review Process, describing principles for
effective supervision.
Supervisors obliged to evaluate activities, corporate
governance, risk management and risk profiles of banks to
determine whether they have to change or to allocate more
capital for their risks (called Pillar 2capital)
Deals with regulatory response to the first pillar, giving regulators
much improved 'tools' over those available to them under Basel I
7. Pillar-III Market supervisory
Covers transparency and the obligation of banks to
disclose meaningful information to all stakeholders
Clients and shareholders should have sufficient
understanding of activities of banks, and the way
they manage their risks.
8. Challenges with Indian Banking Industry..
1. Additional capital requirements.
2. Re-structuring the assets of some of the banks would be a
tedious process.
3. The new norms seem to favor the large banks that have
better risk management and measurement expertise.