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Since publication of the original standard, the financial system has changed dramatically. While many jurisdictions modelled their national rules after the Committee's 1991 guidance, there have been inconsistent results across jurisdictions due to differences in measures of exposure, measures of capital and numerical limits. The revised framework will help ensure a common minimum standard for measuring, aggregating and controlling single name concentration risk across jurisdictions.
The purpose of large exposure limits is to constrain the maximum loss a bank could face in the event of a sudden failure of a counterparty or a group of connected counterparties and to help ensure the bank remains a going concern. Especially where the bank's counterparty is another bank, large exposure limits can directly contribute towards the reduction of systemwide contagion risk.
The large exposure standard published today includes a general limit applied to all of a bank's exposures to a single counterparty, which is set at 25% of a bank's Tier 1 capital. This limit also applies to a bank's exposure to identified groups of connected counterparties (ie counterparties that are interdependent and likely to fail simultaneously). A tighter limit will apply to exposures between banks that have been designated as global systemically important banks (G-SIBs). This limit has been set at 15% of Tier 1 capital.
This final standard takes into account comments on the Committee's March 2013 proposals.The initial proposal has been revised as follows:
The Committee will by 2016 review the appropriateness of setting a large exposure limit for exposures to qualifying central counterparties (QCCPs) related to clearing activities, which are currently exempted. It will also review the impact of the large exposures framework on monetary policy implementation.