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14 December 2009

FSA strengthens stress-testing regime – key element in building up effective risk management


An integrated approach comprises 3 main elements: firms' own stress-testing, FSA stress-testing of specific firms and simultaneous system-wide stress testing. The aim is to ensure a firm's senior management knows how long it can survive during a long crisis.

The Financial Services Authority (FSA) has strengthened its stress-testing regime by requiring firms to improve their stress-testing capability, enhance their capital planning stress-testing and by introducing a reverse stress-testing requirement for firms.

The FSA’s integrated approach to stress-testing consists of three main elements:
·         Firms' own stress-testing – The FSA expects firms to develop, implement and action a robust and effective stress-testing programme which assesses their ability to meet capital and liquidity requirements in stressed conditions, as a key component of effective risk management
·         FSA stress-testing of specific firms – As part of its more intrusive supervisory approach, the FSA runs its own stress tests on a periodic basis for a number of firms. This is carried out regularly for specific high impact firms and for other firms as the need arises, to assess their ability to meet minimum specified capital levels throughout a stress period.
·         Simultaneous system-wide stress-testing – This is undertaken by firms using a common scenario for the purposes of specific system-wide analysis for financial stability purposes.
 
The FSA is taking steps to strengthen all elements of its stress-testing approach, although the changes mentioned in this policy statement refer to firms’ own stress-testing.
Paul Sharma, FSA Director of Prudential Policy, said:
‘Stress and scenario testing should be an important element in firms’ planning and risk management processes. These changes send a clear signal to firms’ senior management that they need to engage in building a robust stress testing infrastructure as an important part of effective risk management, and use that to assess capital needs in a stress’.
‘Reverse stress testing is a separate, but complementary exercise. It is essential that firms identify what could cause their business to fail and use this information to ensure that the relevant risks are sufficiently well-understood and appropriately managed to secure consumer protection and market confidence’.
Next Steps
The FSA will be recommending scenarios to help firms improve capital planning in 2010.
Reverse stress-testing will sit alongside the current range of stress-tests firms are required to carry out in order to ensure they identify and assess scenarios most likely to cause their current business models to become unviable.
Firms subject to the new reverse stress-testing requirements will have twelve months to incorporate reverse stress-testing into their current suite of stress-tests and risk management tools.


© FSA - Financial Services Authority


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