Prior to Covid-19, large internationally active banks made further progress towards meeting fully phased-in final Basel III capital requirements; liquidity ratios improved compared with end-June 2019; Basel III monitoring dashboard gradually introduces an interactive visualisation of the results
Today the Basel Committee published the results of its latest Basel III monitoring exercise,
based on data as of 31 December 2019. The report sets out the impact of
the Basel III framework that was initially agreed in 2010 as well as
the effects of the Committee's December 2017 finalisation of the Basel III reforms and the finalisation of the market risk framework
published in January 2019. Given the December 2019 reporting date, the
results do not reflect the economic impact of Covid-19 on participating
banks. Nevertheless, the Committee believes that the information
contained in the report will provide relevant stakeholders with a useful
benchmark for analysis.
Data are provided for 173 banks, including 105 large internationally
active banks. These "Group 1" banks are defined as internationally
active banks that have Tier 1 capital of more than €3 billion, and
include all 30 institutions that have been designated as global
systemically important banks (G-SIBs). The Basel Committee's sample also
includes 68 "Group 2" banks (ie banks that have Tier 1 capital of less
than €3 billion or are not internationally active).
The final Basel III minimum requirements will be implemented
by 1 January 2023 and fully phased in by 1 January 2028. The average
impact of the fully phased-in final Basel III framework on the Tier 1
minimum required capital (MRC) of Group 1 banks is lower (+1.8%) when
compared with the 2.5% increase at end-June 2019 (see the "reduced
estimation bias" part of the table below). For this calculation, for
three G-SIBs that are outliers due to overly conservative assumptions
under the revised market risk framework, zero change from the revised
market risk framework has been assumed for the calculation of
31 December 2019 results. If these three banks are included with their
conservative market risk numbers (see the "conservative estimation" part
of the table), there is a 2.1% increase.
The capital shortfalls at the end-December 2019 reporting date are
€10.7 billion for Group 1 banks at the target level, in comparison with
€16.6 billion at end-June 2019. The capital shortfalls are not affected
by estimation bias.
The monitoring exercises also collect bank data on Basel III's
liquidity requirements. The weighted average Liquidity Coverage Ratio
(LCR) increased to 138% for the Group 1 bank sample and to 186% for
Group 2 banks. All but one bank in the sample reported an LCR that met
or exceeded 100%. The weighted average Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR)
increased slightly to 117% for the Group 1 bank sample and to 122% for
the Group 2 bank sample. As of December 2019, around 96% of the banks in
the NSFR sample reported a ratio that met or exceeded 100%, while all
Group 1 banks reported an NSFR at or above 90%.
For the first time, the report is accompanied by a Tableau-style dashboard that
presents the results of the liquidity section of the Basel III
monitoring report using an interactive tool to visualise the data.
Similar dashboards related to other sections of the report may be added
at a later stage.
BASEL Committee
© BCBS (BIS)
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