Russian Banking Sector JCC Switzerland-Russia/CIS Zurich, April 2014.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reforming Liquidity Requirements/Pros and Cons of Separate Liquidity Requirements LSE Conference presentation Jan. 24, 2011 Clas Wihlborg Chapman University.
Advertisements

10 May The Role and the Significance of Supervision through the Experience of the Central Bank of Montenegro M.A. Velibor Milošević Deputy General.
1 GLOBAL CRISIS ISSUES AND CHALLENGES FOR THE ARMENIAN FINANCIAL SYSTEM VAHE VARDANYAN Head of Financial system policy and financial stability department.
B A N K P R O F I T A B I L I T Y PROPOSALS FOR A REVISION OF OECD BANKING STATISTICS AND INDICATORS Working Party on Financial Statistics October.
The Benefits and Challenges of Implementation of Basel II in Europe José María Roldán | 27 Sept 2005.
Setting the Standard African Insurance Organisation Credit Assessment Programme Progress Report.
International Insurance Regulatory Issues
Basel II Introduction to the New Regulation for capital adequacy
Commercial Bank Operations
1 Improving transparency in the insurance sector: progress made and outstanding challenges OECD-ASSAL Regional Expert Seminar Montevideo, September.
CPSS-IOSCO Principles for FMIs and TM Assessments Ana Giraldo
FIBI FIRST INTERNATIONAL BANK OF ISRAEL O verview
FIBI FIRST INTERNATIONAL BANK OF ISRAEL O verview
Regulatory Approach to Promote Micro and Small Enterprises financial access The Peruvian case Fiorella Arbulú Diaz Superintendency of Banking, Insurance.
BANCA NAŢIONALĂ A ROMÂNIEI BANCA NAŢIONALĂ ROMÂNIEI.
An Insider’s Perspective on the Basel Capital and Liquidity Reforms Marc Saidenberg Federal Reserve Bank of New York The views expressed here are my own.
Stefan Ingves, 10 November 2011 Basel III – regulations for safer banking Swedish Bankers’ Association.
The ROLE of the ACTUARY in INSURANCE PRUDENTIAL SUPERVISION Yangon, Myanmar 14 July 2014 Chi Cheng Hock, FFA.
Basel III and Indian Banking System By Prof. (Dr.) Divya Gupta IMIS, Bhubaneswar.
Basel III.
Turkish-Arab Economic Forum Panel 6: Potential for Islamic Banking and “Sukuk” for Financing Major Projects in Turkey Hasan Genç Head of Enforcement Department.
BASLE II : KEY ISSUES Basle II : key issues 2 1.What’s new with Basle II 2.Implementation plan whithin Société Générale group 3.Key issues.
2 Major vulnerability factors of the Banking sector and Russian economy Major Risks Macroeconomic factors: Poor diversification of economy; High dependence.
Palestine Capital Markets Authority1.  PCMA has been established in 2005 to be the REGULATOR for the non- banking financial sectors  Sectors under the.
Federal Financial Markets Service of Russia Russian financial market Federal Financial Markets Service of Russia Presentation by Dr. Vladimir Gusakov Deputy.
Regulatory framework in emerging markets: outlining the crises impact Prof. Iryna D’yakonova, Ukrainian Academy of Banking, Ukraine & Tatiana Scherbina,
THE IMPACT OF GOVERNMENT POLICY AND REGULATION ON BANKING
Chile Insurance Solvency Reform Guillermo Larrain Superintendent Superintendencia de Valores y Seguros April 2009.
Chapter Two Banking Background. Who is in charge of the banks? Germany: Federal Supervisory Authority (BaFin) France: Banking Commission Switzerland:
BASEL III – A basis for discussion Podkladový materiál k BASEL III – pracovní verze.
+ Basel lll Summary “ Making Great Ideas Become Reality”
FIBI FIRST INTERNATIONAL BANK OF ISRAEL O verview
Harmonizing Legal and Regulatory Frameworks to Facilitate Regional Domestic Bond Market Development “The East African Community Experience” Presentation.
Russian Trading System Stock Exchange Opportunities of Derivatives market for foreign investors.
Michael Hysek Head of Banking Supervision Financial Market Authority (FMA) Annual Meeting of the EFBS Salzburg, 1 October The FMA and the Austrian.
University of Palestine International Business And Finance Management Accounting For Financial Firms Part (3) Ibrahim Sammour.
30/06/2012 Overview. 2 Net Operating Earnings and ROE NIS Millions 281 NIS Millions 285 NIS Millions.
Financial Markets and Institutions. Financial Markets Financial markets provide for financial intermediation-- financial savings (Surplus Units) to investment.
Chapter Three: Balance Sheet Structure and Management 3.1 Composition of the Balance Sheet Asset-Liability Management (ALM): comprises strategic planning.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin 20-1 © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Importance of Capital Adequacy Absorb unanticipated losses and preserve.
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
Solvency II Open Forum 4 th March 2008 Michael Aitchison.
Actual trends and risks in the Slovak banking sector Štefan Rychtárik National Bank of Slovakia BACEE Country and Bank Conference Budapest, 14 – 16 November.
Preview Basel Accord is global regulatory standard on bank capital adequacy A liquidity agreed upon by the members of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision.
1 Cross Border Financial Positions and Exposures Juan Pablo Graf Banco de México.
Introduction to Basel Norms BCBS –Committee of Central bankers from across the world Tier 1 Capital and Tier 2 capital Risk Weighted Assets.
Regulatory Institutions in Turkey. Regulatory Institutions Central Bank of Turkey Banking Supervision and Regulatory Institutions Capital Markets Board.
The Impact of the Global Crisis on SME and Entrepreneurship Financing Pier Carlo Padoan OECD Deputy-Secretary General Urbino, 21 April
Risk Management Standards and Guidelines
Finance (Basic) Ludek Benada Department of Finance Office 533
Structure of Banking Industry
C E N T R A L B A N K O F C H I L E DECEMBER 2010 Progress status of the Quarterly Institutional Accounts project OECD Working Party on Financial Statistics.
FINANCIAL CONGLOMERATES AND BANK STABILITY: THE CHILEAN CASE Enrique Marshall Superintendent of Banks and Financial Institutions, Chile Washington, D.C.
Qishloq Qurilish Bank INVESTMENT PROPOSAL. In order to fulfill the requirements of the Resolution of the President of the Republic of Uzbekistan №RP-2454.
Basel III Liquidity Vladimír Novotný
COMESA MONETARY INSTITUTE TRAINING ON MACROPRUDENTIAL POLICY TOOLS RELEVANT FOR COMESA MEMBER COUNTRIES WORKSHOP II: DSIBS FRAMEWORK SOLUTIONS.
Risk Management Challenge for Basel Ⅱ & Ⅲ Chau-Jung Kuo Professor, Department of Finance, NSYSU The 19 th Annual Conference on PBFEAM.
Presented By: Manish Gidwani 10 Kapil Israni 16
How 8of9 Can Get You In Shape
Operations to Manage Balances in the Treasury Single Account
ROLE OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS IN CAPITAL FORMATION
Public Hearing | Slavka Eley
Finalising Basel III: Stability through reform International Council of Securities Associations, ICSA ( ) Stefan Ingves Governor of the.
Banking Sector Reforms
Capital Regulations and Management Chapter 6
Basel 2.5, Basel III, and Dodd-Frank
The euro area sovereign debt crisis and its
Basel 3 – A Practical Look
Financial System: Sustainability for Growth
Banking Sector of the Republic of Belarus -
Presentation transcript:

Russian Banking Sector JCC Switzerland-Russia/CIS Zurich, April 2014

2 Agenda I.Banking system trends II.Basel III and DSIBs regulation III.Discussion

3 Unsecured retail lending slow down Bank of Russia regulatory response was targeted and efficient

4 Loan quality adequately reflects economic situation share of loans of 4 and 5 categories in total portfolio share of past dues in loans, deposits and other placements

5 Operating environment becomes challenging Profit as for 1Q 2014 – 233 bln. rub. (1Q 2013 – 239 bln. rub. )

6 Banks learn operate with Basel III capital requirements CET1 min = 5,0%

Basel III in Russia Capital Adequacy Requirements Total capital 10 percent of RWA Tier 1 5,5% CET1 capital ratio 5,0% Point of non-viability trigger for CET1=5,5% Current situation Tier 1 6,0% in 2015 Perspective Tier 2 2% Capital conservation buffer 2,5% CET1 4,5% Basel III minimum requirements with buffers (fully load, start ) Additional Tier 1 1,5% Total capital Additional Tier 1 0,5% CET1 5% Bank of Russia current minimum capital requirements (start ) Tier 2 Countercyclical buffer 10,5% 7% 10% 13% 0-2,5% 8,5% 5,5% 7

8 Liquidity requirements in Russia in force since 1990s (Ratios N2, N3, and N4 under Regulation 139-I) Current situation Reporting on LCR in 2014 for monitoring purposes Quantitative impact study Calibration of some run-off factors Development of alternative liquidity approaches due to an insufficient supply of HQLA Implementation of LCR LCR will be introduced as a prudential ratio starting from January 1, 2015 Basel III in Russia Liquidity Coverage Ratio

- Bank of Russia published methodology for DSIBs designation (Bank of Russia Regulation on U) - Quantitative indicators and supervisory judgment used (in details see App.) - Currently banks in Russia could be considered as DSIBs - Representing 4/5 of banking sector total assets: state-owned, Russian private and foreign subsidiaries - No designation performed yet DSIBs Regulation and Supervision

10 Regulatory measuresImplementation date 1. Capital requirements 1.1DSIBs High Loss Absorbency (HLA) - additional requirements (buffer) to common equity (1% of risk-weighted assets). Start 1 Jan Leverage Ratio.Disclosure Regulatory standard IRB Approach (voluntary).Beginning 2015; in case of banks voluntary decision to be examined on compliance with minimum IRB requirements 2. Liquidity requirements 2.1Liquidity coverage ratio.Monitoring – Regulatory standard – 1Q Net stable funding ratio.Regulatory standard – 1Q DSIBs Regulation and Supervision Prudential regime: proposed framework * - final prudential rules will be defined after consultations with banking industry Other DSIBs requirements -Recovery and resolution plans (obligatory ); -Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP) and Supervisory Review and Evaluation Process (SREP)

DSIBs capital adequacy requirements 11 Common Equity Requirements (% of RWA) Minimum Common Equity Capital Ratio5% 2.Minimum Capital Conservation Buffer0,625%1,25%1,875%2,5% 3.DSIBs HLA Surcharge1% 4. Total Common Equity Capital Ratio6,625%7,25%7,875%8,5% DSIBs Regulation and Supervision Prudential regime: proposed framework No decision on countercyclical buffer in the proposed package

12 Cooperation with foreign supervisory authorities The Bank of Russia Austria Cyprus Germany Greece Ireland Italy Slovakia Belgium Estonia Finland France Latvia Luxembourg Malta Netherlands Portugal Slovenia Spain National Banks and Supervisory Authorities of selected European countries - MoUs signed

Appendix Russian Banking Sector

Appendix 1 SIBs designation 1. Scoring approach (quantitative indicators) Size of credit organization IndicatorsDescriptionWeight Total assets including off-balance sheet items 50% Interconnectedness Intra-financial system assets 12,5% Retail deposits Total retail deposits 25% Basis of calculation: year-end data for last 3 years. Cut-off: banks with highest score, representing 4/5 of banking sector assets. Intra-financial system liabilities 14

2. Supervisory judgment Category of credit organizationsDescription Credit organization – member of banking group (holding) Information on bank significance for the banking group (holding) as well as for the financial sector of Russian Federation. Credit organization acting as financial market infrastructure. Credit organization carrying the functions of: central counterparty, central securities depository, trade repository, securities settlement system or payment system. At this stage the DSIB status in Russia will not result in any additional prudential requirements. DSIBs prudential regime is under discussion Credit organization with considerable amount of retail deposits Total volume of retail deposit is more than 10 billion rubles 15 Appendix 1 SIBs designation

16 Appendix 2 Financial megaregulator: The Bank of Russia (prospective structure) The Bank of Russia Financial Markets Service Regulation and Supervision Securities and Commodities Market Department Collective Investments and Trust Management Department Insurance Market Department General Directorate of Microfinance Market Admission to Financial Markets Department Market Development Financial Markets Development Department Customer and Investor Protection General Directorate of Combating Unfair Market Practices Consumers and Minority Shareholders Protection Service Reporting Department of Collecting and Processing Reporting from Non-Credit Financial Institutions

17 professional participants of the securities market (incl. brokers (885), dealers (889), depositories (616), asset management companies (784), registrars (37)); investment fund, mutual fund and private pension fund management companies (402); specialized depositaries of investment funds, mutual funds and pension funds (43); equity investment funds (7); clearing activities (6); central counterparty activities (3); trade organizing activities (8); central depository activities (1); insurance activities (598); private pension funds (119); microfinance institutions (4667); credit consumer cooperatives (3906); housing savings cooperatives (90); credit bureaus (25); actuarial activities; credit rating agencies (9); pawnshops; agricultural credit consumer cooperatives. Appendix 2 Financial megaregulator: Regulated and supervised institutions Non-banking financial institutions which carry out the following kinds of activities

18 Appendix 2 Financial megaregulator: Prospective directions of development Start IFRS Solvency II Code of Corporate Governance Pension Guarantee System