The PRA publishes its feedback statement, supervisory statements and statement of policy alongside its reporting instrument. The changes that have been made in response to the feedback seek to enhance proportionality further.  
      
    
    
      
	Pillar 2 is an important part of ensuring firms hold adequate capital to support the relevant risks in their business. It is also intended to encourage firms to develop and use enhanced risk management techniques in monitoring and managing their risks.
	There are two main areas that the PRA  considers when conducting a Pillar 2 review: (i) risks to the firm which are either not captured, or not fully captured, under the capital requirements, referred to as Pillar 2A; and (ii) risks to which the firm may become exposed over a forward-looking planning horizon (e.g. due to changes in the economic environment), referred to as Pillar 2B.
	The introduction of CRD IV and the publication by the European Banking Authority (EBA) on guidelines for the Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (‘EBA SREP  guidelines’) has prompted the PRA  to review its Pillar 2 framework.
	The PRA  is also taking this opportunity to re-align its Pillar 2 framework with its supervisory approach document and improve its own Pillar 2A capital methodologies so they are more risk sensitive and can be applied more consistently.
	Andrew Bailey, Deputy Governor, Prudential Regulation, Bank of England and CEO of the PRA  said: “Firms must hold adequate capital to support the risks in their business, ensuring financial stability and continuity in the provision of key services to the wider economy. Pillar 2 capital requirements play an important role in ensuring firms have adequate capital and are a valuable tool for implementing the PRA’s forward looking judgement based supervisory approach. In delivering this approach the PRA  is committed to being a clear, open and transparent regulator and today’s publication demonstrates this commitment.”
	Summary of proposals
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		The methodology used by the PRA  to inform the setting of firms’ Pillar 2A capital are being refined so as to be more transparent and risk sensitive.
 
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		The capital planning buffer will be replaced with a ‘PRA  buffer’ which will harmonise our approach with that of CRD IV. The PRA  buffer will be held by firms to absorb losses that may arise under a severe, but plausible stress, in line with the CRD IV rules.
 
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		Where the PRA  assesses a firm’s risk management and governance to be significantly weak it may also set the PRA  buffer to cover the risk posed by those weaknesses until they are addressed.
 
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		Under the new Pillar 2 framework, firms will need to submit the data necessary for the PRA  to run the new Pillar 2 methodologies with their ICAAP submissions.
 
	Press release
	Assessing capital adequacy under Pillar 2
	The Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP) and the Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP)
	Pillar 2 reporting, including instructions for completing data items FSA071 to FSA082
	Statement of Policy - The PRA’s methodologies for setting Pillar 2 capital
      
      
      
      
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