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Bankers Cite Credit Risk as the Top Concern in Wolters Kluwer’s Basel IV Survey

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There is a general consensus among bankers as to which challenges posed by the Basel III finalization reforms (commonly referred to as Basel IV) are most acute, with credit risk identified as the biggest challenge, and of the need to use the data generated to make their institutions more efficient and profitable. There is, however, less consensus on how to bring risk management systems up to a standard necessary to address the substantial changes that Basel IV presents. That’s according to a report, “Basel IV Readiness Survey – Consensus Is In,” released by Wolters Kluwer’s Finance, Risk & Reporting (FRR) business.

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“The broad agreement on consolidation of financial accounts and the insistence that compliance data be used to inform business decisions and strategic planning reveal a strong appreciation for the need to integrate data management and operational capabilities.”

Approximately 90% of bankers surveyed cited the importance of integrating exact regulatory metrics into business projections for purposes such as capital planning and budgeting. Rules related to credit risk, meanwhile, were identified by 43% of the more than 150 respondents as the biggest challenge in implementing Basel IV, with 20% stating that the biggest challenge were concerns specifically related to counterparty credit risk rules.

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Basel IV is guided by two broad principles: proportionality, under which larger institutions face more burdensome requirements, and interdependency, which focuses on the influence of different types of risk on one another. Prudential consolidation is an especially important issue cited by respondents in the European Union – this will require institutions to run certain Basel IV metrics on different levels. Due to proportionality, moreover, this could imply different kinds of calculations at various consolidation levels. More than 75% of respondents consider it mandatory or important that data management solutions incorporate the tests used to determine whether simpler calculation methods are permitted under the proportionality doctrine, with Asia-Pacific bankers especially inclined to call it mandatory.

Respondents also found it important to use information gleaned from Basel IV compliance to evaluate the costs and benefits of individual deals. About 60% expect compliance and reporting to be a daily occurrence, and most of the rest anticipate a monthly obligation. While 28% of respondents consider a data solution that combines in-house and vendor systems the best way to go, 20% of respondents would select a single vendor with a holistic approach.

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