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O impacto do novo acordo de capitais da Basiléia no sistema bancário do Brasil e Argentina / The impact of new Basel capital accord on Argentina and Brazil banking systemsAndrea Carla Approbato do Espírito Santo 01 December 2009 (has links)
A presente tese tem por objetivo desenvolver um estudo comparativo entre Brasil e Argentina no que se refere à implementação do Novo Acordo de Capitais da Basiléia publicado em 2004. Nesse sentido as legislações divulgadas pelos dois países sobre o tema foram analisadas. A metodologia utilizou documentos oficiais que tratam do tema da Basiléia e da integração financeira no âmbito do MERCOSUL. Adicionalmente foi utilizado o software estatístico SPSS para geração de demonstrativos gráficos do índice de Basiléia das instituições financeiras nos dois países. A tese constata que a implementação de Basiléia II foi importante para a discussão regulatória no âmbito do sistema financeiro dos países, mas não foi suficiente por conter a crise em curso. As exigências de adequação de capital encontradas em Basiléia II e na legislação de cada país podem contribuir para aumentar a solidez e estabilidade das instituições financeiras nos dois países, desde que sempre acompanhadas de supervisão constante e intervenção estatal nos momentos de crise. A tese também constata a existência de iniciativas de harmonização regulatória do setor financeiro no âmbito do MERCOSUL e neste sentido a implementação das diretrizes do Novo Acordo poderá interferir positivamente num processo futuro de integração financeira. / The present thesis develops a comparative study between Brazil and Argentina regarding the implementation of the New Basel Capital Accord published in 2004. In this sense, publications aiming this subject were analyzed for both countries. Official documents dealing with Basel as well as financial integration in MERCOSUL were used. In addition, measurements of Basel index for financial institutions of both countries were obtained and compared . Results evidence that, although Basel II implementation was important for financial systems regulation, it was not responsible to restrain ongoing crisis. Capital requirements found in Basel II and legislation of each country can contribute to increase financial institutions´ stability and must be followed by constant supervision and state intervention at moments of crisis. Results also evidence regulatory harmonization initiatives of financial sector in the scope of MERCOSUL, and in this sense the implementation of the New Accord, will be able to intervene positively with a future process of financial integration.
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A comparative study of the capital structures of liquid and liquidity-stressed banksMomberume, Richard 24 July 2013 (has links)
M.Comm. (Financial Management) / The costs of the 2007- 09 financial crises on global economies have resulted in new central bank rules to strengthen financial institutions. The question of whether there were any significant differences in capital structures between banks who were liquid and those who were liquidity constrained in the 2007– 2009 global financial crisis, still needs to be answered. Theoretical models on corporate failure partly explain how bank capital management impacts on whether a bank fails or not. This study investigates the differences in capital ratios between banks who were liquidity- stressed and those who were liquid. A comparative analysis of selected banking capital ratios were done followed by a discriminant analysis to determine if there is a relationship between the capital structures of liquid and liquidity- stressed banks. It was found that there were differences in capital structures of liquid and liquidity- stressed banks but capital ratios on their own, could not be used as early warning sign for bank failure.
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Měření a řízení operačního rizika v bankách / Measurement and management of Operational risk within banksKováříková, Šárka January 2008 (has links)
This thesis concerns measurement and management of operational risk within banks. First the Basel II concept is described. Following part focuses on definition of operational risk, description of its subparts, methods of how to measure it and phases of the management process. Methods of how to control and mitigate the operational risk are also defined in this section. Last part focuses on analysis of principles and standards which every bank should follow to effectively identify, assess, monitor and control/mitigate the operational risk. A questionaire which can be used to identify the level of operational risk within a bank is proposed in this section.
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Dopad Basel II na kapitálovou přiměřenost bank / The impact of Basel II on capital adequacy of banks.Koplová, Martina January 2009 (has links)
This thesis is focused on the new basel capital accord - Basel II. The first part of the work deals with financial risks and their regulation. Next part is concerned on Basel I and Basel II. This part defines basic terminology and three pillars - minimum capital requirements, supervisory review process and market discipline. In the last part there is an analysis of impact of Basel II on capital adequacy of czech banks.
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Basel II a IS/ICT / Basel II and IS/ICTKovář, Petr January 2008 (has links)
The Basel II Framework ensures banks are well capitalized. It is designed to be more risk sensitive than the old Basel Capital Accord and considers operational risk, such as "the risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal procesess, people and systems or from external events." Banks are forced to calculate the regulatory capital charge for operational risk and want to optimize it. IT is a substantial part of operational risk and therefore is a part of the regulatory capital charge for operational risk. The Basel Committee requires banks to implement a framework to manage operational risk. One objective of this study is to provide description of this framework, IT aspects of operational risk and IT governance under Basel II, based on available sources of information. Another objective is to design processes for assessing and managing IT and operational risks under Basel II. Last but not least objective of this study is to disclose recent credit risk data and indicators for consolidated sector and large banks in the Czech republic. The amount of the regulatory capital charge for operational risk is an important part of the overall capital charge. This work increases IT practitioner's understanding of such topics as assessing and managing operational risk under Basel II.
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Basel II vs. Basel III a vliv nové regulace na české bankovnictví / BASEL II vs BASEL III and the Impact of the New Regulatory Rules on the Czech Banking SectorKubíček, Antonín January 2011 (has links)
The aims of this thesis are twofold. Firstly, it aims to analyse the new regulatory rules BASEL III, published in December 2010. These were created as a lesson from the previous crisis and following the developments occurring problem areas included in the regulatory rules Basel II. And secondly, it evaluates their impact on the Czech Banking Sector. Regulatory rules BASEL III contain large number of rules aimed at enhancing the quality, quantity and flexibility of regulatory equity capital, reducing the cyclicality of capital requirements, stricter capital requirements for certain risky assets, intensifying surveillance in terms of significantly important financial institutions and international standards of liquidity. Apart from adjustment of the rules that appear in the Basel II, the regulatory rules Basel III also include rules used for the first time. The analysis of the impact on the Czech banking sector is based on the assumption that the Czech banking sector is well equipped with capital and the impact of BASEL III will therefore not have any significant impact on the functioning of Czech banks. This thesis shows that the impacts depend on the size of the banking institutions. A selected sample of six Czech banks (two from each group of large, medium and small banks) is used, inter alia, to demonstrate this.
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A STUDY ASSESSING THE IMPACTS OF NEW REGULATORY PROPOSALS ON CYCLICALITY OF CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS: THE CASE OF THE CZECH REPUBLIC / Studie zabývající se dopady nové bankovní regulace na cykličnost kapitálových požadavků v České RepubliceBartůsek, Michal January 2011 (has links)
This work focuses on new regulatory proposals, primarily Basel III accords and analyzes its ability to create a buffer for recurrent credit bubbles. This paper follows a research made by Lis, Pagés and Saurina [2000]. Their paper has illustrated the cyclicality of loan growth and GDP growth for Spain. This cyclicality is supported by cyclical Basel II regulation. In this paper is examined the ability of new regulatory proposals such as Basel III, statistical provisions and change in the approach to the probability of default, to cope with recurrent credit bubbles. According to my critical assessment, Basel III may not be able to create sufficient capital buffer for exceptional credit bubbles such as the current one. This buffer suggested by Basel III has several drawbacks which may decrease its functionality. Statistical provision is not an appropriate measure either, because it could weaken the fair and true view of financial statements principle. Change in approach to probability of default seems to be rational and effective. The only issue may relate to its recovery mechanisms. It doesn't support economic growth in time of economic recession. The author's proposal of new countercyclical buffer, which would be based on credit-to-GDP ratio and GDP growth to loan growth gap is introduced at the end of this work. Although this measure may have negative impact on GDP growth, it may create an appropriate buffer to systematic credit risk.
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Essays on financial frictions with an application to the Chinese economyZeng, Zhiteng 26 January 2021 (has links)
This dissertation consists of three chapters related to macroeconomic implications of financial frictions, along with an application of macro-finance models to the Chinese economy.
The first two chapters focus on government guarantees on business loans to state-owned enterprises (SOEs), a typical practice of the Chinese government. Chapter 1 embeds partial loan guarantees into the loan contracting problem, built upon the costly state verification framework. A larger degree of guarantees dampens the sensitivity of the loan rate to a change in leverage, which incentivizes entrepreneurs to lever up. Also, greater guarantees reduce entrepreneurs' exposures to credit risks, hence altering their choices of investment and leverage in response to an exogenous risk shock.
Chapter 2 proceeds to develop a New Keynesian dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model and investigates the effect of government guarantees on capital misallocation and business cycle fluctuations in China. On one hand, government guarantees mitigate the influence of the financial accelerator mechanism on investment and production of both SOEs and private-owned enterprises (POEs). On the other hand, by inducing a time-varying dispersion in returns on capital across SOEs and POEs, government guarantees exert a negative impact on the allocative efficiency of resources and thus cause further losses on total factor productivity (TFP) and output during recessions. Quantitative analyses show that partial loan guarantees to SOEs are counterproductive in moderating the reaction of GDP to both risk and technology shocks.
Chapter 3 develops a DSGE model with financial constraints on entrepreneurs and banks, featuring a risk-based bank capital requirement, and discusses the role of Basel II in reinforcing procyclical tendencies of the credit market and the real economy. I study impulse responses of the calibrated model to various shocks. Quantitative results show that the direction and magnitude of cyclical effects arising from Basel II strongly depend on the nature of macroeconomic shocks that hit the economy: only a risk shock can generate noticeable procyclical effect, while the procyclicality under a TFP shock and the countercyclicality under a shock to the marginal efficiency of investment (MEI) are quantitatively insignificant.
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Name Concentration Risk and Pillar 2 Compliance : The Granularity AdjustmentTorell, Björn January 2013 (has links)
A credit portfolio where each obligor contributes infinitesimally to the risk is said to be infinitely granular. The risk related to the fact that no real credit portfolio is infinitely granular, is called name concentration risk. Under Basel II, banks are required to hold a capital buffer for credit risk in order to sustain the probability of default on an acceptable level. Credit risk capital charges computed under pillar 1 of Basel II have been calibrated for a specific level of name concentration. If a bank deviates from this benchmark it is expected to address this under pillar 2, which may involve increased capital charges. Here, we look at some of the difficulties that a bank may encounter when computing a name concentration risk add-on under pillar 2. In particular, we study the granularity adjustment for the Vasicek and CreditRisk+ models. An advantage of this approach is that no vendor software products are necessary. We also address the questions of when the granularity adjustment is a coherent risk measure and how to allocate the add-on to exposures in order to optimize the credit portfolio. Finally, the discussed models are applied to real data
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The effect of Basel II on SME financing in Germany. An exploratory study of the impact of the new Basel Accord on SMES and financiers in GermanySchmid, Bernhard January 2011 (has links)
The New Capital Accord (henceforth, Basel II), is expected to impose
dramatic changes on banks and other providers of corporate financing, as
well as companies. Literature indicates that small and medium sized
enterprises (henceforth SMEs), in general, and in particular German SMEs
seem to be affected: Germany has the highest SME density with SMEs
comprising 99.6% of all corporations (IMF, 2008), these SMEs are highly
dependent on banks for financing (see Jacobson et al, 2006). However, there
is huge controversy in the literature concerning how these changes will look,
right before Basel II came into effect in the years 2007 / 2008 in the
European Union. In order to explore this effect from a Post-Basel II
perspective, the objective of this research project is to establish what effect
Basel II will have on corporate financing of SMEs in Germany.
The high impact on SMEs (in Germany), combined with controversial
evidence from extant Pre-Basel II research, indicates a high relevance to
academics and practitioners for this thesis. This thesis is probably the first
from a Post-Basel II perspective which covers both the SMEs' as well as
the financiers' perspective.
Based on a structured literature review using the comparative method
(Peters, 1998) 'Most Different Systems' evidence is provided that there is no
consistent picture regarding the effect of Basel II. Therefore, further research
is needed to determine whether the effect in Germany is consistent, from a
Post-Basel II perspective, with regards to the conditions which trigger certain
mechanisms, from a 'scientific realism' (Smith, 1998) perspective, because
the literature indicates that 'positivist generalising' has limited validity.
Building on Creswell (2003), an 'exploratory sequential' design was created
to test three initial hypotheses (as confirmation or refutation of a theory, see Gujarati, 2003:8): a multi-method design is best suited to the author's
philosophical stance of 'scientific realism' by means of triangulation (Robson,
2002:174). The result of the initial quantitative phase is based on the analysis
of questionnaire data from 125 SMEs and financiers (banks, private equity
companies, family offices, providers of alternative means of financing) derived
from a probabilistic sample frame in the fourth quarter of 2008. Mathematical
models for SMEs and financiers regarding the three initial hypotheses
were set-up and tested using the appropriate statistical tests. In order to limit
bias by means of a spill-over effect from the financial crises, control
questions were used. The subsequent qualitative phase by means of semistructured
elite interviews (Saunders et al, 2007:312) between March and
May 2009 enabled a valid triangulation and provided in-depth insights into
how SMEs can cope best with Basel II. The purposive sample, of 17 'important
cases', included company owners and top-level financier executives.
In a conclusive quantitative and qualitative synopsis, the three initial
hypotheses were acknowledged. However, the qualitative in-depth analysis
by means of 'causal networks' (Miles and Huberman, 1994) led to an
amendment of the hypotheses as follows:
1. Corporate finance has become different for SMEs because the 'house
bank principle' has changed to a 'core bank principle' due to Basel II.
Shopping around regarding credits will be more difficult which makes
financing more difficult. This could be overcompensated by major SMEs,
by using non-credit corporate financing which leads to a reduction of the
'house bank' principle.
2. SMEs can cope best with the effect when they:
a) proactively engage in rating and improve the parameters, or
b) they adjust their strategy as stated in hypothesis 3.
3. Financiers (especially non-bank financiers) will engage in SME corporate
finance when they have a sound financial basis / management and when
they adjust their strategy in terms of growth with the aim of niche market
leadership and when they open up for exit strategies.
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