37 - Capital Requirements Flashcards
Why do providers of financial benefits need to hold provisions?
- Liabilities that have accrued but which have not yet been paid
- Future periods of insurance against which premiums have already been received
- Claims already incurred but which have yet to be settled
What 2 components make up the regulatory solvency capital
- Prudential margins in the regulatory liability valuation basis
- Additional solvency capital in excess of regulatory provisions
What 2 approaches are available for balancing between regulatory capital components?
- Strong reserving with small SCR
2. Weak reserving with large SCR
State the disadvantage of using Prudent provisions and Simple formula based Capital requirements
It makes it difficult to compare providers and to ensure there is enough security to p/hs
State 3 Pillars of SII
- Quantification of risk exposures and capital requirements
- A supervisory regime
- Disclosure
Describe what Pillar I of SII covers
- Includes rules for valuing both the assets and provisions for liabilities
- Also includes the determination of two levels of capital requirement (MCR and SCR)
Describe what Pillar II of SII covers
Deals with qualitative aspects, covers eg
1. A company’s internal controls and risk management processes &
- The company’s own view of its strategic capital needs
- Firms are also required to consider their internal economic capital requirements under the ORSA
Describe what Pillar III of SII covers
Covers both public disclosure and private disclosure by the company to the regulator.
What are the 2 levels of SII Capital requirements
- MCR - the threshold at which companies will no longer be permitted to trade
- SCR - the target level of capital below which companies may need to discuss remedies with their regulators.
State 2 types of ways that can be used to calculate the SCR
- Standard formula
2. Internal model (considerable work needs to be done to justify usage)
What are the pros/cons of using the Standard model?
- Less complex
- Less time consuming
- Captures risk profile of average company
- Approximations made in modelling risks
- May not be appropriate to the companies that use it
- Can’t be used to calculate economic capital
What are BASEL accords?
These are global banking capital requirements
They set requirements for the amount of capital needed by banks to reflect level of risks in the business
List 3 Pillars of BASEL III
- Minimum capital requirements
- Risk management and supervisions
- Market discipline and disclosure
Describe what Pillar I of BASEL III covers
Includes rules for evaluating capital requirements for credit, market and operational risks
Describe what Pillar II of BASEL III covers
- Deals with addressing firm-wide governance and risk management.
- Also includes evaluation of all other major risk types in the bank