Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGloria Bradford Modified over 9 years ago
1
‚ 1 The New Capital Adequacy Framework for Credit Risk Possible Impact on the Austrian Banking Sector and Banking Supervision Franz Partsch Credit Division Oesterreichische Nationalbank Vienna, 1 February, 2001
2
‚ 2 Overview Empirical analysis: sample 37 larger Austrian banks Magnitude and variability of credit risk Data sources: annual bank supervision audit report, monthly statistical returns Portfolio structure Data sources: central credit register, rating data, sector default data Conclusions "Road map" for the implementation of the new Accord based on empirical evidence and judgement Disclaimer:available data do not come from credit risk management sources and can only serve as more or less suitable proxies for credit risk
3
‚ 3 Watch loans Extreme values Outliers Median BoxInterquartile Range Highest Non-Outlier Lowest Non-Outlier
4
‚ 4 Doubtful loans
5
‚ 5 Loss loans
6
‚ 6 Value adjustments to operating result Value adjustments of claims and allocations to provisions for contingent claims and for credit risks
7
‚ 7 Value adjustments to loans
8
‚ 8 Value adjustments to assets
9
‚ 9 Conclusions (I) Credit risk is by no means immaterial for the average large Austrian bank has been, on average, fairly stable over the last years shows significant and increasing differences between banks
10
‚ 10 Austrian Central Credit Register Description Register of all borrowers from financial institutions (banks, leasing companies, insurance companies) with more than ATS 5m in total loans outstanding or credit lines Purpose service for reporting institutions source of information for supervisory authorities Content structural data on borrowers (name, address, legal form etc.) monthly reporting by types of loans quality check and aggregation regular and ad-hoc information on total indebtedness of borrowers
11
‚ 11 Loans by borrower type (I)
12
‚ 12 Loans by borrower type (II)
13
‚ 13 Loans by country type
14
‚ 14 Country Risk Weights (Rating agency)
15
‚ 15 Country Risk Weights (Export Credit Agency)
16
‚ 16 Hypothetical default rates (corporate sector risk) Payment incidence: reported non-payment of commercial or financial debt
17
‚ 17 Corporate sector risk distributions Payment incidence
18
‚ 18 Corporate sector risk distributions Bankruptcy
19
‚ 19 Borrower number by borrower type
20
‚ 20 Effective number of loans
21
‚ 21 Hypothetical Granularity Scaling Factor
22
‚ 22 Conclusions (II) Credit risk is by no means immaterial for the average Austrian large bank has been, on average, fairly stable over the last years shows significant and increasing differences between banks Portfolio structure large banks have significant domestic and foreign lending in all exposure classes (corporates, public, financial) country risk is concentrated in highly rated areas, but lending to countries with low ratings is material for some banks corporate exposures are concentrated in medium risk sectors, but lending to corporates in high risk sectors is material for some banks the number of borrowers in some exposure classes (public, financial) is fairly small and (lack of) granularity will be an issue for some banks
23
‚ 23 "Road map" for Basel II Data own time series on ratings, defaults, losses data pooling mapping to external data check against other data sources Estimation of risk parameters robust methods using relatively few data transparency for tests by risk managers, supervisors and market participants First: sound rating system and risk management framework Then:
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.