Responding to the cross-jurisdictional implications of the Herstatt debacle, the eleven members of the
G-10,
Luxembourg and
Spain formed a standing committee under the auspices of the
Bank for International Settlements (BIS). The committee, named the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, comprises representatives from central banks and regulatory authorities. This type of settlement risk, in which one party in a
foreign exchange trade pays out the currency it sold but does not receive the currency it bought, is often called
Herstatt risk. The failure of Herstatt Bank was a key factor that led to the worldwide implementation of
real-time gross settlement (RTGS) systems, which ensure that payments between one bank and another are executed in real-time and are considered final. The work on these issues was coordinated by the
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision under the
Bank for International Settlements. The
Continuous Linked Settlement (CLS) bank and system was launched almost 30 years later in 2002. This
payment versus payment (PVP) process enables member banks to trade foreign currencies without assuming the settlement risk associated with the process, whereby a counterparty could fail before delivering their leg of the transaction. ==See also==