A key part of bank regulation is to make sure that firms operating in the industry are prudently managed. The aim is to protect the firms themselves, their customers, the government (which is liable for the cost of
deposit insurance in the event of a bank failure) and the economy, by establishing rules to make sure that these institutions hold enough capital to ensure continuation of a safe and efficient market and are able to withstand any foreseeable problems. The main international effort to establish rules around capital requirements has been the
Basel Accords, published by the
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision housed at the
Bank for International Settlements. This sets a framework on how
banks and
depository institutions must calculate their
capital. After obtaining the capital ratios, the bank capital adequacy can be assessed and regulated. In 1988, the Committee decided to introduce a capital measurement system commonly referred to as
Basel I. In June 2004 this framework was replaced by a significantly more complex capital adequacy framework commonly known as
Basel II. Following the
2008 financial crisis, Basel II was to be replaced by
Basel III, however this was completed only in some countries and is scheduled to be completed in others in 2025 and 2026. Implementation of the
Basel III: Finalising post-crisis reforms (also known as Basel 3.1 or Basel III Endgame), introduced in 2017, was extended several times, and is now scheduled to go into effect on July 1, 2025 with a three-year phase-in period. Another term commonly used in the context of the frameworks is
economic capital, which can be thought of as the capital level bank shareholders would choose in the absence of capital regulation. The
capital ratio is the percentage of a bank's capital to its
risk-weighted assets. Weights are defined by risk-sensitivity ratios whose calculation is dictated under the relevant Accord. Basel II requires that the total capital ratio must be no lower than 8%. Each national regulator normally has a very slightly different way of calculating bank capital, designed to meet the common requirements within their individual national legal framework. Most developed countries implement Basel I and II, stipulate lending limits as a multiple of a bank's capital
eroded by the yearly inflation rate. The five Cs of Credit—Character, Cash Flow, Collateral, Conditions and Covenants—have been replaced by one single criterion. While the international standards of bank capital were established in the 1988 Basel I accord, Basel II makes significant alterations to the interpretation, if not the calculation, of the capital requirement. Examples of national regulators implementing
Basel include the
FSA in the UK,
BaFin in Germany,
OSFI in Canada,
Banca d'Italia in Italy. In the United States the primary regulators implementing Basel include the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Reserve. In the European Union member states have enacted capital requirements based on the
Capital Adequacy Directive CAD1 issued in 1993 and CAD2 issued in 1998. In the United States,
depository institutions are subject to risk-based capital guidelines issued by the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB). These guidelines are used to evaluate capital adequacy based primarily on the perceived
credit risk associated with
balance sheet assets, as well as certain
off-balance sheet exposures such as
unfunded loan commitments,
letters of credit, and
derivatives and
foreign exchange contracts. The risk-based capital guidelines are supplemented by a
leverage financial ratio requirement. To be
adequately capitalized under federal bank regulatory agency definitions, a
bank holding company must have a
Tier 1 capital ratio of at least 4%, a combined Tier 1 and
Tier 2 capital ratio of at least 8%, and a leverage ratio of at least 4%, and not be subject to a directive, order, or written agreement to meet and maintain specific capital levels. To be
well-capitalized under federal bank regulatory agency definitions, a
bank holding company must have a Tier 1 capital ratio of at least 6%, a combined Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital ratio of at least 10%, and a leverage ratio of at least 5%, and not be subject to a directive, order, or written agreement to meet and maintain specific capital levels. These capital ratios are reported quarterly on the
Call Report or
Thrift Financial Report. Although Tier 1 capital has traditionally been emphasized, in the
Late-2000s recession regulators and investors began to focus on
tangible common equity, which is different from Tier 1 capital in that it excludes
preferred equity. Regulatory capital requirements typically (although not always) are imposed at both an individual bank entity level and at a group (or sub-group) level. This may therefore mean that several different regulatory capital regimes apply throughout a bank group at different levels, each under the supervision of a different regulator. ==Regulatory capital==