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It also provides a quantitative measure to assess the extent to which this difference has narrowed as a result of the Basel III reforms.
The pre-crisis regulatory framework provided banks with a large degree of discretion in determining their capital requirements. This resulted in excessive variability in banks' capital requirements, which ultimately undermined the credibility of the risk-weighted capital framework at the peak of the global financial crisis. The Basel III post-crisis reforms developed by the Basel Committee seek to reduce this variability. How successful will they be in achieving this outcome?
Over the period 2001 to 16, there was a wide degree of RWA variability among banks. Market-implied RWA estimates were higher than those modelled by banks.
What drove this variability? Authors find a significant association between the degree of RWA variability and:
Put differently, market participants 'penalise' banks with such features relative to other banks.
And regarding Basel III - authors find that the 2017 Basel III reforms - most notably the output floor - help to reduce excessive RWA variability.