See main article: Basel III.
Basel III: Finalising post-crisis reforms, sometimes called the Basel III Endgame, Basel 3.1 or CRR3, are changes to international standards for bank capital requirements that were agreed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) in 2017 and are due for implementation in January 2023. They amend the international banking standards known as the Basel Accords.[1]
The Basel Committee describes these changes as completing the Basel III reforms, published in 2010–11,[2] and calls them "finalised Basel III post-crisis reforms".[3] These remaining reforms to prudential regulation of banks are known by various names in BCBS member jurisdictions (often including other Basel III reforms that remain to be implemented – in particular, FRTB). In the US, implementation of these reforms is the main part of what is being called the Basel III "Endgame".[4] [5] The UK calls the changes "Basel 3.1".[6] In the European Union, it is typically known as CRR3.[7] Others have referred to them as Basel IV; however, the secretary general of Basel Committee said in a 2016 speech he did not view the changes as substantial enough to describe them in such a way.[8]
Critics of the reforms, in particular those from the banking industry, argue that the standards lead to a significant increase in capital requirements, when the stated intention of the Basel Committee was for the changes to the standards to be capital neutral in terms of their aggregate impact, although not necessarily neutral for individual banks.[1]
Basel III is an international regulatory framework for banks, developed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) in response to the financial crisis of 2007-08. It contains various rules on capital and liquidity requirements for banks. The 2017 reforms complement the initial Basel III. This set of rules was adopted on 7 December 2017 with an intended implementation date of January 2022 (including a phase-in period for the output floor until 2027).[9] [10] As the BCBS does not have the power to issue legally binding regulation, the Basel standards have to be implemented by national authorities.[11]
The secretary general of the Basel Committee said, in a 2016 speech, that he did not believe the changes are substantial enough to warrant a new Roman numeral. The Basel Committee refer to only three Basel Accords.[12]
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the BCBS agreed to delay implementation by one year until January 2023.[13]
The reforms revise the standardised approach for credit risk (SA-CR), the internal ratings-based approach for credit risk (IRB), the credit valuation adjustment (CVA) framework, the calculation of operational risk RWAs, the leverage ratio, and introduce an aggregate output floor for risk weighted assets (RWAs).
The BCBS press release summarised the reforms as follows:[14]
These reforms will take effect from January 2023, with exception of the output floor, which is phased in, taking full effect only on 1 January 2028.[15]
The standards are expected to increase capital requirements for British banks alone by £50bn.[16] The average Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) capital ratio for major European banks is estimated to fall by 0.9%, with the biggest impact on banks in Sweden and Denmark of 2.5–3%.[17] The December 2020 assessment by the European Banking Authority (EBA) of the capital impact of implementing Basel 3.1 in the EU is an increase of 18.5% in minimum required capital with the impact for some national banking sectors forecast to be much higher (based on figures as of 31 December 2019).[18]
The Basel Committee set 1 January 2023 as the (revised) date for implementation of the new rules. However, in October 2021 the European Commission proposed an implementation date of 1 January 2025.[19] In March 2022, the UK's Bank of England also announced that they will propose an implementation date of January 2025.[20]