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The Basel II Accord and H.R. 1226
Before the Subcommittee on Domestic and International Monetary Policy, Trade, and
Technology and the Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit,
Committee on Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives
May 11, 2005
Chairman Bachus, Chairman Pryce, and members of the Subcommittee on Financial
Institutions and Consumer Credit and the Subcommittee on Domestic and International
Monetary Policy, Trade, and Technology: It is a pleasure to join my colleagues from the
other banking agencies to discuss the current status of Basel II in this country, as well as the
Federal Reserve's views on H.R. 1226. The continued discussion among the Congress and
the regulators--and, of course, the banking industry and other members of the public--is
critical to the final implementation of the new capital accord.
The focus of recent attention has been the agencies' announcement that they will delay the
notice of proposed rulemaking (NPR) for Basel II, originally scheduled for midyear 2005. In
my remarks today, I will discuss the reasons for the delay and the Board's views regarding
the timetable for implementation of Basel II in this country. But, first, I believe it may be
useful to remind the members of the subcommittees why the agencies thought it wise to
explore and then develop a modernization of the current capital accord; those factors have
become, if anything, more important than they were when we began the process.
Our banking system is becoming more concentrated, with a number of very large entities
operating across multiple business lines and national boundaries, each entity with positions
and exposures that are both complicated and difficult for third parties to understand. These
entities have outgrown the current regulatory capital regime, which is still adequate for most
banks. But the current rules simply cannot keep up with the complex business of the global
banking organizations toward which Basel II and its infrastructure prerequisites are directed.
These organizations represent significant risks to the financial system should they develop
substantial problems in a period of stress. Basel II offers the opportunity to work with these
large entities to develop quantitative risk-measurement and risk-management systems that
can both measure their risk more accurately and become the basis for more risk-focused
capital requirements and prudential supervision. We would also require, as part of the Basel
II approach, more public disclosures to improve market discipline and supplement
supervisory efforts.
Many internationally active U.S. banks apparently agree that we should work toward Basel
II. Indeed, we and the industry have already seen some benefits from work on Basel II
implementation in that market participants and bank supervisors have developed a common
language for inputs into risk-management processes.
Earlier this year, twenty-six banking organizations provided us with internal measures of
credit risk as part of the fourth quantitative impact study, or QIS4. The agencies have now
reviewed the risk parameter estimates provided and are discussing with individual
participants their approaches to developing the required inputs. These discussions, which are

ongoing, have significantly changed some of the data provided, and some modifications are
still coming in.
Nonetheless, even with these revisions, two conclusions are already clear. First, the
dispersion among the banks in their estimates of the key parameters that would be used to
calculate Basel II capital requirements was quite wide--much wider than expected. Second,
the implied reductions in minimum regulatory capital were often substantial--far more than
previous quantitative impact studies, both here and abroad, had suggested. As responsible
and prudent regulators, we believe it is appropriate to improve our understanding of these
results and to see whether changes might be needed in our proposals.
From the outset of our participation in the development of Basel II, the U.S. agencies have
clearly and consistently stated that the final adoption of the new capital rules in the United
States would occur only after (1) we had reviewed all public comments and incorporated
any needed adjustments to address legitimate concerns, and (2) we were satisfied that Basel
II was consistent with safe and sound banking in this country. Throughout this process we
have stressed that, should we become concerned about the level of overall capital in the
banking system or the capital results for individual portfolios, we would seek to modify the
framework, including possibly recalibrating the regulatory capital formulas that translate an
individual bank's risk parameters into required capital. The agencies' current review and
study is consistent with our historical position at Basel.
All of the agencies want to have a better understanding of QIS4 data and results. Does the
dispersion reflect different risk profiles? Different model assumptions? Different estimates of
risk for the same kind of asset? Different kinds of internal rating systems with some looking
"through the cycle" and others being "point in time"? Different stages of institutions'
implementation efforts? Limitations of current data bases? Some other factor? We hope that
further analysis and discussion with respondents can provide some answers to such
questions. All the agencies believed that the prudent approach was to delay the NPR to gain
better understanding of the reasons for the unexpected results.
Still, this decision presents the U.S. banking agencies with a dilemma. There is good reason
to delay the NPR and related supervisory guidance, but those very documents are needed to
provide more complete blueprints for what banks will need in terms of the databases and
systems to implement Basel II. We are not saying that these large entities today have
inadequate risk-management systems. Rather, they do not yet have the systems for
producing Basel II inputs that meet the standards set forth in the Basel II proposal. Until the
banking organizations have the NPR, many just will not be able to provide us the inputs we
need to assess how banks would operate under Basel II. The dilemma can be solved only by
first issuing the NPR. But, we must then have a prudent and flexible way to make
adjustments should the resultant data produce results that we, as supervisors, are not
comfortable with. The plans developed before the delay in the NPR offer just such an
opportunity.
Under those plans, institutions required or planning to move to Basel II would, after the
adoption of a final rule, decide when to start their parallel run--with the first opportunity in
January 2007. During the required parallel run, each bank would continue to calculate its
required capital under the current capital regime and simultaneously calculate its Basel II
capital statistics for review by its primary supervisor. When the supervisor believes that the
bank has produced four quarters of credible Basel II estimates, the bank would be able to
enter a minimum two-year transition run, the earliest in 2008 under these plans. During this

transition run, the bank would be under Basel II capital rules, but it could not reduce its
capital below 90 percent of what the current capital rules would require in the first year or
below 80 percent in the second year. The length of either the parallel run or the transition
run could be extended if the primary supervisor had doubts about the bank's Basel II system
or the prudence of the resulting minimum regulatory capital level. Only after a minimum
two-year transition run and only if its primary supervisor had no objection could a U.S. bank
operate fully under Basel II capital rules.
This phase-in plan has been designed to ensure that bank inputs are reasonable and
consistent with sound risk-management practices and that supervisors are comfortable with
the safety and soundness of Basel II before it goes fully "live" in the United States. Please
note that only when we get into the parallel run period will the agencies be able to
accurately assess the aggregate capital effects as well as the effects on individual institutions
from the new accord. Only then will banks' systems provide risk-parameter inputs that
comport with the operational requirements of Basel II, and only then can the U.S. authorities
be confident that the resultant capital calculations are reliable estimates of what will happen
when Basel II is fully implemented. Such data would be far superior to those obtained
through the four QIS exercises that we have conducted to date, which, as I have noted, have
been carried out by banks on a best-efforts basis using systems that do not yet meet the
standards required under Basel II. Once we have data from the parallel run period, the
agencies can then consider the need, if any, for a recalibration of the Basel II parameters or
other actions to ensure more-accurate risk sensitivity and a prudent level of overall capital.
This deliberate process provides multiple safeguards to help the agencies move to the final
adoption of the new framework in the United States only when doing so is clearly
appropriate. In other words, our implementation strategy has been designed to be both
prudent and flexible enough to move banks from Basel I to Basel II as their own systems
mature and they can provide reasonably accurate assessments of their credit and operational
risks. The agencies' analysis of and reaction to QIS4 results show how those safeguards
work: We saw results that gave us concern, and so we are investigating further before we go
to the next stage. Additional, future safeguards--such as the NPR process and the minimum
one-year parallel run and the minimum two-year transition period, with options to extend
either--will also ensure ample opportunity to recalibrate or seek other adjustments if
necessary.
But, for now, we believe that after a certain point, further analysis of QIS4 is likely to reap
little or no additional benefit. We should, of course, try to learn what we can from these data
and particularly look for indications of the need to modify the Basel II proposal where
necessary. However, as soon as we have learned what we can, we should promptly return to
the development of the joint NPR and related supervisory guidance. These documents are
essential so that core and opt-in banks can continue to develop the databases and systems
that they would need to operate under the Basel II capital rules and that would provide
more-accurate risk parameter estimates than those in QIS4.
Recall that there have already been three rounds of U.S. public comments on the Basel II
consultative papers between 1999 and 2004; an advance notice of proposed rulemaking
(ANPR) in 2003; and numerous agency discussions with congressional committees, banking
groups, and individual banks. All have resulted in significant modifications to the proposal.
Once published, the NPR and the supervisory guidance will once more elicit comments that
could result in further revisions. Particularly given its delayed issuance, the NPR must solicit
feedback from core and potential opt-in banks as to whether the current timeline for

implementing Basel II in this country needs to be delayed or can be retained.
Looking forward, I agree with my colleagues at this table that it is prudent to delay the NPR
in order to see what we can learn from further review of QIS4 data, recognizing at the outset
that final answers will not be forthcoming because the requisite databases and
risk-management systems are not yet in place. I hope that we can return to the NPR before
midyear, present it to the Office of Management and Budget for its review, as our OCC and
OTS colleagues must do, and release the NPR in the fall. With such a schedule, one might
hope that the parallel running period, currently scheduled for 2007, need not be delayed.
But, as I noted earlier, it is important for the agencies to get feedback on this issue during the
NPR comment period. The views of banking organizations will provide critical insights into
the feasibility of the scheduled 2008 start date for the transition run. Once we have the
views of the banking organizations, the agencies will be in a better position to reach a
consensus on the timeline.
Basel II has the potential to be an important supervisory step forward. The Basel I
framework is being arbitraged aggressively and provides us with less and less reliable
measures on which to base a regulatory capital requirement for our largest and most
complex banking organizations. Moreover, banks have spent tens of millions of dollars
preparing for the U.S. implementation of Basel II and have contracts for further investment.
They are awaiting the NPR, the guidance, and the final rules. Their global competitors are
proceeding, and U.S. banks will be eager to avoid being placed at a competitive
disadvantage. I might add that, as supervisors, we believe that the core risk-measurement
and risk-management improvements contained in Basel II are appropriate, regardless of how
the future accord is finally structured and calibrated. So it is, in our view, a good idea for
banks to continue their current trajectory of making risk-management investments.
While the regulatory capital requirements ultimately produced by Basel II would be, we
believe, considerably more risk sensitive than the current capital regime, importantly this is
not the only capital regulation under which U.S. institutions would operate. Over a decade
ago, the Congress, as part of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act's
Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) regime, defined a critically undercapitalized insured
depository institution by reference to a minimum tangible-equity-to-asset requirement, a
leverage ratio. The agencies have also used other leverage ratios to define other PCA capital
categories because experience has suggested that there is no substitute for an adequate
equity-to-asset ratio, especially for entities that face the moral hazard that accompanies the
safety net. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), responsible to the Congress
for the management of the critical deposit insurance portion of the safety net, has underlined
the importance of that minimum leverage ratio and PCA as part of a prudent supervisory
regime.
The Federal Reserve concurs in the FDIC's view. We need, for reasons I have given, the
risk-measurement and risk-management infrastructure and risk sensitivity of Basel II; but we
also need the supplementary assurance of a minimum equity base. The market and the rating
agencies will continue to require exactly that kind of base, and a regulatory minimum is
prudentially desirable.
Even though the market and the rating agencies, not to mention bank management, will still
require banking organizations to carry capital considerably above regulatory minimums,
many of the thousands of depository institutions that will remain under the current capital
rules are concerned about the impact of Basel II on their businesses. This concern is often

voiced as a general disquiet about broad competitive feedbacks but also about competitive
implications in specific markets. The Federal Reserve has published a series of research
papers investigating such concerns voiced in public comments on the previous ANPR on
Basel II. These studies have indeed suggested that there are potential effects that should be
addressed in the small business and residential mortgage markets.
For this reason, as well as to continue to modernize the current capital regime, the agencies
are developing, simultaneously with the Basel II proposal, a proposal to revise the current
capital rules for non-Basel II banks to make those rules more risk sensitive and to blunt any
unintended harm that Basel II might impose on non-adopters. Our intention is to keep these
proposed changes simple to minimize any costs imposed on the many non-adopters. We plan
to issue these proposals for public comment concurrently with or soon after the NPR on
Basel II, to allow the banking community to comment on a combined package of proposed
changes. However, these revised Basel I rules would not be an adequate substitute for the
necessary capital reforms for the large, complex, global banks operating in this country
because they would not provide the incentives for banks to adopt the more-sophisticated
risk-measurement and risk-management techniques envisioned by the Basel II proposal.
Chairman Bachus and Chairman Pryce, I would also like to present the Federal Reserve's
views on H.R. 1226, a bill setting up a committee of the four banking and thrift regulators to
reach a common U.S. position on Basel issues and authorizing the Secretary of the Treasury,
as its chairman, to determine a common position on any issue about which the regulators
could not agree. The Federal Reserve believes that the bill does not fully reflect the existing
process used by the four agencies to develop and modify Basel II and we would counsel that
Congress not enact it.
Staff members of the four agencies have held frequent and comprehensive discussions about
Basel II throughout the process. Certainly, the agencies have sometimes disagreed on
specific issues, and we will sometimes disagree in the future. But we have in the past been
able to find a common position that we can all support at Basel, and we will do so in the
future. The salient fact is that any one of us has a veto over the entire proposal because we
all realize that different rules cannot be applied to similarly situated insured depository
institutions. That fact forces us to develop consensus positions on which all of us can agree.
We have done so in the past because we understand that if the agencies cannot reach a
collective agreement at Basel, the Basel II reforms will not be implemented in the United
States while they go forward in the rest of the world. Communication, compromise, and
comity are the prerequisites for agreement among the agencies.
Further, the ability of the U.S. agencies to negotiate effectively at Basel would be severely
constrained if our foreign counterparties knew that we had to return to a committee before
we could agree. The formalized "decision by committee" approach of H.R. 1226 would not
advance U.S. interests in the complex and dynamic Basel negotiation process. The U.S.
banking agencies need to preserve our current flexibility to respond to Basel issues if we are
to develop a set of capital rules that are useful and productive for U.S. banks and thrifts.
Moreover, it is possible that the agencies are more likely to implement effectively an
agreement that they helped shape than they would be one that was imposed on them and for
which they did not understand fully the rationale. While we urge the Congress not to move
forward on this bill, we look forward to keeping Congress fully informed as the Basel
process continues.
I will be pleased to answer your questions.

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2005 Testimony
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Last update: May 11, 2005, 10:00 AM