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Basel II implementation and revisions to Basel I
Before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate
November 10, 2005
Chairman Shelby, Senator Sarbanes, and members of the Committee on Banking, Housing,
and Urban Affairs, I thank you for the opportunity to join my colleagues from the other
federal banking agencies to discuss the current status of Basel II in this country, as well as
the status of proposed amendments to our existing Basel I-based capital rules.
Introduction
The Federal Reserve considers the maintenance of strong and stable financial markets as an
integral part of our responsibility and critically related to safety and soundness of the
participants in those markets. Financial stability contributes to sustained economic growth
by providing an environment in which financial institutions, businesses, and households can
conduct their business with more certainty about future outcomes. Part of maintaining a
strong financial system is ensuring that banking organizations operate in a safe and sound
manner with adequate capital cushions that appropriately support the risks they take.
As many of you are aware, there have been two major developments within the past six
weeks regarding U.S. regulatory capital requirements that apply to banking institutions. First,
on September 30, the U.S. banking agencies announced their revised plan for the
implementation of the Basel II framework in the United States. Second, the agencies
published for comment an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) pertaining to
amendments to the existing Basel I-based capital rules (the amended Basel I). Taken
together, these proposals on Basel II and the amended Basel I represent substantial revisions
to the regulatory risk-based capital rules applied to U.S. banking institutions, from the very
largest to the smallest. From the Federal Reserve's perspective, these two initiatives, when
implemented successfully, should produce a much-improved regulatory capital regime in the
United States that enhances safety and soundness. The Federal Reserve considers the
ongoing discussion between the Congress and the U.S. banking agencies--and, of course,
with the banking industry and members of the public--to be critical to the success of both
sets of proposals.
Reasons for Pursuing Basel II
We have all witnessed the substantial changes in the U.S. banking industry over the past
decade, including growth in size and geographic scope, expansion of activities, development
of new instruments and services, and greater use of technology. As a result, we have seen
the rise of very large entities with large geographic reach operating in many lines of business
and engaging in complex and sophisticated transactions. The largest institutions have moved
away from the traditional banking strategy of holding assets on the balance sheet to
strategies that emphasize redistribution of assets and actively managing risks. These dramatic
changes to the risk profiles of many banking organizations have only accelerated with the
continued evolution of many, often complex, financial tools, such as securtitizations and
credit derivatives.

Additionally, risk-management techniques employed by many banking organizations
continue to change, improve, and adapt to the ever-changing financial landscape. For
instance, operational risk was not part of our risk-management thinking ten years ago, but
tools to identify, measure, and manage it are now becoming prevalent. Also, the lines
between the banking book and the trading book have blurred significantly and organizations
continue to move resources and products to optimize earnings and manage risks. And finally,
global competition has intensified significantly, as the ability of customers to choose from a
variety of local and international banking firms, as well as nonbank competitors, has
increased.
While the current Basel I-based rules have served us well for nearly two decades, they are
simply not appropriate for identifying and measuring the risks of our largest, most complex
banking organizations. Basel I, even when periodically amended, must be straightforward
enough for even the smallest banking organizations to implement with relative ease. Thus,
the categories of risk used to determine capital are very broad and are intended to capture
the "average" risk levels across the banking system for that generic exposure.
Large financial institutions, however, tend to manage risk in more proactive ways, and are
able to take advantage of new innovations in financial instruments to hedge, sell, or take on
risk exposures to support their business strategies and profitability targets. As a result, they
are able to remove balance sheet exposures for risks where they feel regulatory capital is set
too high, and thereby reduce minimum regulatory capital. Smaller organizations generally do
not have the risk-management systems or scale of transactions to make these practices
economically viable.
While the balance sheet focus of Basel I is appropriate for most banking organizations, the
largest organizations have significant exposures off the books, and these risk exposures need
to be considered explicitly in determining minimum regulatory capital for these sophisticated
organizations. Large organizations are increasingly gravitating toward fee-based revenue
streams. This is due to securitizations of loan portfolios that retain the responsibility of
servicing the loans, buying and selling financial instruments for customers, and growth in
business lines where fees are generated by transactions and account processing. These
activities have little exposure shown on the balance sheet at a moment in time, but failure to
operate complex systems and negotiate complex financial deals in a sound manner can lead
to large loss exposures given the volume of activity that runs through the line of business.
They also use sophisticated models to manage credit, market, and interest rate risks. Poor
data integrity, model reliability or lack of sufficient controls, can create losses when
management action relies on the faulty results of decision models.
Finally, the complexity of these organizations makes it more difficult for executive
management to view risk in a comprehensive way, both in terms of aggregating similar and
correlated risks, but also in identifying potential conflicts of interest between the growth of a
line of business and the reputation, legal, and compliance risks of the firm as a whole. In
recent years, large financial institutions have reported losses from breaks in these operating
controls that in some cases have exceeded those in credit or market risk.
The Basel II framework should improve supervisors' ability to understand and monitor the
risk taking and capital adequacy of large complex institutions, thereby allowing regulators to
address emerging problems more proactively. It should also enhance the ability of market
participants, through public disclosures, to evaluate the risk positions at those institutions by

providing much better risk measures. The advanced approaches under Basel II, which
include the advanced internal ratings-based approach (or A-IRB) for credit risk and the
advanced measurement approaches (or AMA) for operational risk, offer particularly good
improvements in terms of risk sensitivity, since they incorporate advanced risk-management
processes already used today by best-practice institutions.
Indeed, the expected improvements in risk measurement and risk management form the core
of our reasons for proposing Basel II in the United States. Its advanced approaches create a
rational link between regulatory capital and risk management. Under these approaches,
institutions would be required to adopt a set of quantitative risk-measurement and
sophisticated risk-management procedures and processes. For instance, Basel II establishes
standards for data collection and the systematic use of the information collected. These
standards are consistent with broader supervisory expectations that high-quality risk
management at large complex organizations depends upon credible data. Enhancements to
technological infrastructure--combined with detailed data--will, over time, allow firms to
better track exposures and manage risk. The emphasis in Basel II on improved data
standards should not be interpreted solely as a requirement to determine regulatory capital
standards, but rather as a foundation for more advanced risk-management practices that
would strengthen the value of the banking franchise. But while the new framework would, in
our view, provide useful incentives for institutions to accelerate the improvement of risk
management, we believe that in most areas of risk management institutions would continue
to have the choice among which methods they employ.
Thus, from a safety and soundness regulatory perspective, for these large, complex financial
organizations, regulators and market participants need the information provided by the
advanced framework of Basel II.
Recent Developments with Basel II
The Federal Reserve considers the agencies' September 30 announcement relating to Basel
II a good outcome and an example of successful interagency cooperation. As you may
recall, in April of this year the agencies announced jointly their reaction to initial results of a
fourth quantitative impact study pertaining to Basel II, known as QIS4. As the April
statement indicated, we were concerned about results from QIS4 that showed a wider
dispersion and a larger overall drop in minimum regulatory capital requirements for the QIS4
population of institutions than the agencies had initially expected. The initial QIS4 results
prompted the agencies to delay issuance of a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPR) for Basel
II in order to conduct further analysis of those results and their potential impact. The
agencies' reaction to the initial QIS4 results, deciding to take additional time to understand
more fully the information provided by the QIS4 institutions, is an indicator of how seriously
we are taking Basel II implementation.
During the summer, the U.S. agencies conducted additional analysis of the information
reported in QIS4. That analysis is for the most part complete. Based on the new knowledge
gained from the additional QIS4 analysis, the U.S. agencies collectively decided to move
ahead with an NPR but adjust the plan for U.S. implementation of Basel II. Adjustments to
the plan include extending the timeline for implementation and augmenting the transitional
floors, which should provide bankers and regulators with more experience with Basel II
before it is fully implemented in the United States. In addition, the agencies stated
specifically in our joint press release that after completing a final rule for Basel II, we intend
to revisit that rule prior to the termination of the transitional floors. That is, we expect to
perform additional in-depth analyses of the Basel II minimum capital calculations produced

by institutions during the parallel run and transitional floor periods before we move to full
implementation without floors. This is consistent with the overall process we have laid out
for implementing Basel II. We want to ensure that the minimum regulatory capital levels for
each institution and in the aggregate for the group of Basel II banks provide an adequate
capital cushion consistent with safety and soundness.
Probably the most important thing we learned from the QIS4 analysis is that progress is
being made toward developing a risk-sensitive capital system. In terms of the specifics of the
analysis, we learned that the drop in QIS4 capital was largely due to the favorable point in
the business cycle when the data were collected. While the previous QIS3 exercise was
conducted with data from 2002, a higher credit loss year, QIS4 reflected asset portfolio,
risk-management information and models during one of the best periods of credit quality in
recent years. We learned that the dispersion was largely due to varying risk parameters used
by the institutions, which was permissible in the QIS4 exercise, but also due to portfolio
differences. That is, banks have different approaches to risk-management processes, and
their models and databases reflect those differences.
We also learned that some of the data submitted by individual institutions was not complete;
in some cases banks did not have estimates of loss in stress periods--or used estimates that
we thought were not very sophisticated--which caused minimum regulatory capital to be
underestimated. Based on the results of QIS4, the Federal Reserve recognizes that all
institutions have additional work to do. In our view, the findings did not point to
insurmountable problems, but instead identified areas for future supervisory focus. In that
way, the analysis was critical in providing comfort to enable us to move forward.
It is also helpful to remember that the QIS4 exercise was conducted on a best-efforts basis.
It was just one step in a progression of events leading to adoption of the Basel II framework.
We certainly expect that as we move closer to implementation, supervisory oversight of the
Basel II implementation methodologies by our examination teams would increase. Indeed,
during the qualification process we expect to have several additional opportunities to
evaluate institutions' risk-management processes, models, and estimates--and provide
feedback to the institutions on their progress. So while the QIS4 results clearly provided a
much better sense than before of the progress in implementing Basel II and offered
additional insights about the link between risks and capital, QIS4 should not be considered a
complete forecast of Basel II's ultimate effects. It was a point-in-time look at how the U.S.
implementation was progressing.
Institutions participating in QIS4 put a lot of time and effort into assisting with the QIS4
analysis. For that reason, we owe it to the institutions to provide feedback prior to engaging
in a detailed public discussion of the findings. Those feedback sessions, a full interagency
effort involving an interagency agreed-upon presentation of the results, are now underway
and we expect them to be largely completed by the end of this month. The agencies plan to
release a public document describing our findings shortly after these sessions are completed,
we hope by the end of the year.
Proposed Next Steps in the Basel II Process
I would now like to describe some possible next steps in the Basel II process. To be clear,
these thoughts represent our best estimates at this time and could change, given the
extensive opportunity for public comment and additional interagency discussions to come.
But I thought it would at least be helpful to offer the Federal Reserve's perspective.
First, we support the idea of finishing an NPR on Basel II and related supervisory guidance

as soon as possible, which right now looks to be in the first quarter of 2006. We believe that
the best way to further augment our understanding of the impact of Basel II is to issue the
NPR and hear reaction from the Congress, the industry, and the public. In addition, we are
interested in issuing the NPR and related supervisory guidance as soon as possible so that
bankers can have a better idea of supervisory expectations relating to Basel II. The NPR will
help bankers identify the areas where they need to strengthen their risk-measurement
processes as they continue to prepare for adoption of Basel II.
After the end of the NPR comment period, the agencies plan to review the comments and
decide more specifically on how to move forward. The agencies would then develop a
strategy for issuing a final rule on Basel II, of course taking into account comments received.
Once the final rule is issued, those institutions moving to Basel II would complete
preparations to move to a parallel run, a period in which minimum regulatory capital
measures under both Basel II and Basel I will be calculated. Under the current timeline, the
parallel run would start in January 2008.
The parallel run period, which is intended to last for four continuous quarters, should
provide us with additional key information about the expected results for Basel II on a
bank-by-bank basis, as well as the level of bank preparedness to operate under Basel II.
Once an institution conducts a successful parallel run, the relevant primary federal
supervisor would then confirm the bank's readiness and give permission for the institution to
move to the first initial phase of adoption, into the initial floor period. It is only after an
institution has operated to the primary supervisor's satisfaction in the parallel run and each
of the three years of floors that it would be allowed to have its minimum regulatory capital
requirements determined by Basel II with no floors.
During U.S. implementation of Basel II, if at any stage in the process we see something that
concerns the banking agencies, we will reassess and propose amendments to relevant parts
of the framework. The agencies have already decided to embed in the planned timeline the
possibility for a later revision to the initial Basel II rule (before the floors are removed),
since it is expected that new information provided in the parallel run and floor years might
point to a need for adjustments to that initial rule. This is entirely consistent with the path we
have taken in the past regarding Basel I, to which there have been more than twenty-five
revisions since 1989. The Federal Reserve considers all of the planned safeguards and
checks and balances to be sufficient for Basel II to be implemented in the United States
effectively, and with no negative impact on safety and soundness or the functioning of
banking markets.
Proposed Amendments to Basel I
As I noted, the Basel II proposal is not the only minimum regulatory capital proposal being
contemplated by the U.S. banking agencies. We have issued an ANPR for amendments to
Basel I that is another important initiative in our efforts to update regulatory capital rules.
The regulatory capital rules to be amended by the ANPR would apply to thousands of
banking institutions in the United States, while the Basel II proposal would likely only apply
to ten to twenty at inception. The agencies are focusing considerable attention on the
potential interplay between the proposed Basel II rules and the proposed Basel I
amendments in order to ensure that the goals for each are achieved.
The Federal Reserve's statement pertaining to the release of the ANPR highlighted that the
revisions are intended to align risk-based capital requirements more closely with the risk
inherent in various exposures. The ANPR relates, in part, to some long-standing issues in our

current capital rules that have been identified (such as requiring capital for short-term
commitments). We also noted that the amended Basel I is intended to mitigate certain
competitive inequalities that may arise from the implementation of Basel II rules (such as
lowering the risk weight for some residential mortgage exposures). In considering these
possible revisions, the U.S. agencies are seeking to enhance the evaluation of bank portfolios
and their inherent risks without undue complexity or regulatory burden. In issuing the
ANPR, an advance notice, the agencies are emphasizing that views are still being developed
and additional comment from the banking industry and other interested parties would be
both beneficial and welcome before we move forward. We are intentionally leaving a
number of areas open in order to solicit a broad range of comments before we narrow down
the range of possibilities.
The U.S. banking agencies have identified over the past several years a number of issues that
need to be addressed within our current Basel I rules. The development of Basel II-based
rules also creates the need for the U.S. agencies to amend the current rules in order to
address issues relating to competitive impact. While we view that impact as limited, we want
to ensure that institutions not moving to Basel II have equal opportunities to pursue business
initiatives and are not placed at a competitive disadvantage or otherwise adversely affected.
That is why we are being very careful to analyze the potential results of these two efforts in
tandem, and asking for the Congress, the industry, and others to provide comments on the
potential effects of both initiatives.
We believe that the revisions to Basel I-based rules should benefit most institutions by better
reflecting current risk exposures in regulatory capital requirements at little additional burden.
Naturally, regulatory capital requirements are usually not the binding constraint for banking
organizations. Nearly all institutions hold capital in excess of the minimum required
regulatory ratios, in many cases several percentage points above, to satisfy rating agencies,
debtholders and shareholders, and counterparties in the market. By the same token, pricing
in the banking industry is not driven by regulatory capital, but rather, as most would
intuitively assume, by supply and demand and business decisions made by bankers. But we
think regulatory capital can act as a useful gauge of risk-taking, even though it would not be
the deciding factor in business decisions.
With respect to the proposals for amended Basel I, as well as Basel II, the Federal Reserve
fully supports retention of the existing prompt corrective action (PCA) regime, which the
Congress put in place more than a decade ago, as well as existing leverage requirements. In
addition to the safeguards planned for initiatives being discussed today, we at the Federal
Reserve take comfort that the PCA and leverage requirements will continue to provide a
level of protection for depositors, consumers, and the financial system as a whole. These
regulations help to ensure a minimum level of capital at individual institutions and in the
aggregate that we consider to be absolutely vital to the health of our banking system and the
economy more broadly.
Importance of the Rulemaking Process
At the Federal Reserve--indeed, I think I can say among all the U.S. banking agencies--we
understand and respect the rulemaking process and the legal requirements for implementing
regulatory revisions. This, of course, includes comment periods for each of our regulatory
capital proposals and transparency in our overall process. We encourage a healthy debate
about the agencies' proposed initiatives--including the recently revised timeline for Basel II.
We look forward to continuing to engage the industry, the Congress, fellow supervisors, and
others in a discussion about what effects the Basel II framework and the Basel I revisions

might have on our banking system. The proposals are intended to provide the right
incentives for bankers, but if the proposals do not achieve this goal, we want to know why.
In the past, when we have been provided with well-documented and convincing reasons for
making a change to the Basel II framework or the U.S. implementation process, we have
heeded those arguments. We expect to have the same posture regarding comments on the
proposed Basel I amendments. We continue to recognize that vigorous discussion and debate
produce a much better product. And we expect to remain vigilant about the potentially
unintended and undesired consequences, particularly those that might affect a certain class
of banks.
Additionally, I would like to emphasize that from my perspective the U.S. agencies continue
to work well with one another on these regulatory capital proposals in a general environment
of cooperation and good will. While the U.S. agencies naturally disagree on certain policy
matters and implementation issues from time to time, we at the Federal Reserve are pleased
with the outcomes to date and recognize that all four agencies are making considerable
contributions to the overall effort.
Dialogue with the Industry
The extension of the U.S. timeline for Basel II, along with the ongoing proposals for
amended Basel I, obviously present some challenges for U.S. institutions. We will continue
our efforts to ensure that we hear about these challenges and do our best to assist institutions
in meeting them. First of all, bankers must keep track of the latest proposals and understand
what they could mean for their own institutions. For those institutions looking to prepare for
adoption of Basel II, making the manifold upgrades in risk-measurement and -management
systems--not the least of which is developing credible databases--is even more difficult,
especially since complete and final supervisory expectations have yet to be released. But we
certainly hope that institutions do not lose momentum based on the revised timeline for
Basel II; indeed, that timeline reflects our assessment of the work that still lies ahead.
While institutions might be challenged to move forward in certain areas until the Basel II
NPR and its associated supervisory guidance is issued, we still believe that they can make
strides in other areas. For one, the agencies all along have emphasized the importance of
institution-specific implementation plans, which include gap analyses, clearly defined
milestones, and remediation plans. In other words, we think that institutions could now
continue development of the corporate governance surrounding each institution's efforts in
Basel II implementation and focus on their individual implementation processes. In addition,
supervisors have begun to discuss individual QIS4 results with each participant; these
discussions include specific feedback about the institution's results and some general peer
comparisons.
Additionally, we do recognize that the recent update to U.S. implementation plans could
generate some challenges for U.S. institutions as they try to implement Basel II worldwide,
as well as for foreign banks operating in the United States. Overall, we think these challenges
are manageable and we can facilitate solutions to them during the implementation process.
While not downplaying potential challenges, the U.S. agencies, in deciding to adjust
implementation plans, thought it was important to ensure that implementation in the United
States be conducted in a prudential manner and without generating competitive inequalities
in our banking markets. As before the September 30 announcement, we continue to work
with institutions and foreign supervisors to minimize the difficulties in cross-border
implementation. Our support includes extensive discussion with other countries in the Basel
Accord Implementation Group, as well as more informal, bilateral discussions with

institutions and foreign supervisors. Our view is that these cross-border issues do not
necessarily represent fundamentally new problems; while requiring some work, these
challenges are manageable. It is also useful to point out that all Basel member countries have
their own rollout timelines and national discretion issues, not just the United States--which is
entirely appropriate. In order to assist institutions in resolving their cross-border challenges,
we are eager to hear specifics from institutions so that we can develop targeted solutions.
Conclusion
Mr. Chairman, in my remarks today I have described the Federal Reserve's views on
suggested changes to the current regulatory risk-based capital regime, namely the proposals
for Basel II and amended Basel I. I have outlined the need for change, the work completed
to date, and some of the lessons learned. In our view, recent exercises such as QIS4 have
served as useful indicators of the progress being made and the direction needed for these
initiatives on regulatory capital requirements. QIS4 was part of an extended series of
activities to ensure that the suggested regulatory capital revisions are implemented in an
appropriate and prudent manner. From the Federal Reserve's perspective, we should
continue to move forward with the activities I described, while seeking comment and
listening to feedback at every stage.
Our support for Basel II stems from the belief that it would provide a much better measure
of minimum regulatory capital at the largest, most complex institutions, aligning capital with
risks to which these institutions are exposed. We also believe that Basel II would bring about
substantial improvements in risk management to those institutions. At the same time,
amending Basel I for the vast majority of banking institutions in the United States could
improve the reflection of risks in Basel I-based rules without much additional burden. Taken
together, these initiatives should ensure adequate minimum capital cushions, allow fair
competition, maintain safety and soundness, and enhance financial stability.
I am pleased to answer your questions.
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