BIPRU 12
Liquidity standards
BIPRU 12.1
Application
- 01/12/2009
- Past version of BIPRU 12.1 before 01/12/2009
BIPRU 12.1.1
See Notes
Subject to BIPRU 12.1.2R, BIPRU 12 applies to:
- (1) [deleted]
- (1A) a UK bank;
- (1B) a building society;
- (1C) a UK designated investment firm;
- (2) an incoming EEA firm which:
- (a) is a CRD credit institution; and
- (b) has a branch in the United Kingdom; and
- (3) a third country BIPRU firm which:
- (a) [deleted]
- (b) has a branch in the United Kingdom.
BIPRU 12.1.2
See Notes
BIPRU 12.1.3
See Notes
BIPRU 12.1.4
See Notes
- (1) An exempt full scope BIPRU investment firm is a full scope BIPRU investment firm that at all times has total net assets which are less than or equal to 50 million.
- (2) In this rule, total net assets are the sum of a firm's total trading book assets and its total non-trading book assets, less the sum of its called up share capital, reserves and minority interests.
- (3) For the purpose of (2), the value attributed to each of the specified balance sheet items must be that which is reported to the FCA in the firm's most recent FSA001 data item.
BIPRU 12.1.5
See Notes
BIPRU 12.1.6
See Notes
BIPRU 12.1.7
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2
Adequacy of liquidity resources
- 01/12/2009
The overall liquidity adequacy rule
BIPRU 12.2.1
See Notes
- (1) A firm must at all times maintain liquidity resources which are adequate, both as to amount and quality, to ensure that there is no significant risk that its liabilities cannot be met as they fall due.
- (2) For the purpose of (1):
- (a) a firm may not include liquidity resources that can be made available by other members of its group;
- (b) an incoming EEA firm or a third country BIPRU firm may not, in relation to its UK branch, include liquidity resources other than those which satisfy the conditions in BIPRU 12.2.3R;
- (c) a firm may not include liquidity resources that may be made available through emergency liquidity assistance from a central bank (including the European Central Bank).
BIPRU 12.2.2
See Notes
Branch liquidity resources
BIPRU 12.2.3
See Notes
The conditions to which BIPRU 12.2.1R (2)(b) refers are that the firm's liquidity resources are:
- (1) under the day-to-day control of the UK branch's senior management;
- (2) held in an account with one or more custodians in the sole name of the UK branch;
- (3) unencumbered; and
- (4) for the purpose of the overall liquidity adequacy rule only, attributed to the balance sheet of the UK branch.
BIPRU 12.2.4
See Notes
Liquidity resources: general
BIPRU 12.2.5
See Notes
For the purposes of the overall liquidity adequacy rule, liquidity resources are not confined to the amount or value of a firm's marketable, or otherwise realisable, assets. Rather, in assessing the adequacy of those resources, a firm should have regard to the overall character of the resources available to it which enable it to meet its liabilities as they fall due. Therefore, for the purposes of that rule, a firm should ensure that:
- (1) it holds sufficient assets which are marketable, or otherwise realisable;
- (2) it is able to generate funds from those assets in a timely manner;
- (3) it maintains a prudent funding profile in which its assets are of appropriate maturities, taking account of the expected timing of that firm's liabilities; and
- (4) it is able to generate unsecured funding of appropriate tenor in a timely manner.
BIPRU 12.2.6
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2.7
See Notes
Liquid assets buffer and funding profile
BIPRU 12.2.8
See Notes
For the purposes of the overall liquidity adequacy rule, an ILAS BIPRU firm must also ensure that:
- (1) its liquidity resources contain an adequate buffer of high quality, unencumbered assets; and
- (2) it maintains a prudent funding profile.
BIPRU 12.2.9
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2.10
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2.11
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2.12
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2.13
See Notes
Individual assessments of liquidity adequacy
BIPRU 12.2.14
See Notes
The adequacy of an ILAS BIPRU firm's liquidity resources needs to be assessed both by that firm and by the appropriate regulator. This process involves:
- (1) in the case of a standard ILAS BIPRU firm, an Individual Liquidity Adequacy Assessment (ILAA) which such a firm is obliged to carry out in accordance with BIPRU 12.5;
- (2) in the case of a simplified ILAS BIPRU firm, an Individual Liquidity Systems Assessment (ILSA) which such a firm is obliged to carry out in accordance with BIPRU 12.6; and
- (3) a Supervisory Liquidity Review Process (SLRP), which is conducted by the appropriate regulator.
BIPRU 12.2.15
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2.16
See Notes
As part of its SLRP, the appropriate regulator will, having regard to the liquidity risk profile of the firm, consider:
BIPRU 12.2.17
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2.18
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2.19
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3
Liquidity risk management
- 01/12/2009
BIPRU 12.3.1
See Notes
The approach taken in BIPRU 12.3 is to set out:
- (1) overarching systems and controls provisions in relation to a firm's management of its liquidity risk;
- (2) provisions outlining the responsibilities of that firm's governing body and senior managers for the oversight of liquidity risk;
- (3) more detailed provisions covering a number of specific areas, including:
- (a) pricing liquidity risk;
- (b) intra-day management of liquidity;
- (c) management of collateral;
- (d) management of liquidity across legal entities, business lines and currencies; and
- (e) funding diversification and market access.
BIPRU 12.3.2
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.3
See Notes
Overarching liquidity systems and controls requirements
BIPRU 12.3.4
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.4A
See Notes
The strategies, policies, processes and systems referred to in BIPRU 12.3.4 R should include those which enable it to assess and maintain on an ongoing basis the amounts, types and distribution of liquidity resources that it considers adequate to cover:
- (1) the nature and level of the liquidity risk to which it is or might be exposed;
- (2) the risk that the firm cannot meet its liabilities as they fall due; and
- (3) in the case of an ILAS BIPRU firm, the risk that its liquidity resources might in the future fall below the level, or differ from the quality and funding profile, of those resources advised as appropriate by the appropriate regulator in that firm's individual liquidity guidance or, as the case may, its simplified buffer requirement.
BIPRU 12.3.5
See Notes
The strategies, policies, processes and systems referred to in BIPRU 12.3.4 R must be proportionate to the complexity, risk profile and scope of operation of the firm, and the liquidity risk tolerance set by the firm's governing body in accordance with BIPRU 12.3.8 R, and must reflect the firm's importance in each EEA State, in which it carries on business.
[Note:article 86(2) (part) of the CRD]
BIPRU 12.3.6
See Notes
- (1) [deleted]
- (2) [deleted]
- (3) A firm should ensure that its strategies, policies, processes and systems in relation to liquidity risk enable it to identify, measure, manage and monitor its liquidity risk positions for:
- (a) all sources of contingent liquidity demand (including those arising from off-balance sheet activities);
- (b) all currencies in which that firm is active; and
- (c) correspondent, custody and settlement activities.
- (4) [deleted]
- (5) A firm should ensure that it has in place early warning indicators to identify immediately the emergence of increased liquidity risk or vulnerabilities, including indicators that signal whether embedded triggers in funding or security arrangements such as warranties, covenants, events of default, conditions precedent or terms having similar effect are likely to, or will, be breached, occur or fail to be satisfied, or contingent risks will or are likely to crystallise, in either case with the result that access to liquidity resources may be impaired.
- (6) A firm should ensure that it has in place reliable management information systems to provide its governing body, senior managers and other appropriate personnel with timely and forward-looking information on the liquidity position of the firm.
- (7) Contravention of any of (3), (5) and (6) may be relied upon as tending to establish contravention of BIPRU 12.3.4R.
BIPRU 12.3.7
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.7A
See Notes
- 01/01/2014
Governing body and senior management oversight: liquidity risk tolerance
BIPRU 12.3.8
See Notes
A firm must ensure that:
- (1) its governing body establishes that firm's liquidity risk tolerance and that this is appropriately documented;
- (2) its liquidity risk tolerance is appropriate for its business strategy and reflects its financial condition and funding capacity; and
- (3) its liquidity risk tolerance is communicated to all relevant business lines.
[Note: article 86(2) of the CRD]
BIPRU 12.3.9
See Notes
Governing body and senior management oversight: approval and review of arrangements
BIPRU 12.3.10
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.11
See Notes
A firm must ensure that its governing body reviews regularly (and not less frequently than annually):
- (1) the continued adequacy of any strategies, policies, processes and systems approved in accordance with BIPRU 12.3.10R; and
- (2) the firm's liquidity risk tolerance.
BIPRU 12.3.12
See Notes
A firm must ensure that its senior managers:
- (1) continuously review that firm's liquidity position, including its compliance with the overall liquidity adequacy rule; and
- (2) report to its governing body on a regular basis adequate information as to that firm's liquidity position and its compliance with the overall liquidity adequacy rule and with BIPRU 12.3.4R.
BIPRU 12.3.13
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.14
See Notes
Pricing liquidity risk
BIPRU 12.3.15
See Notes
- (1) In relation to all significant business activities, a firm should ensure that it accurately quantifies liquidity costs, benefits and risks and fully incorporates them into:
- (a) product pricing;
- (b) performance measurement and incentives; and
- (c) the approval process for new products.
- (2) For the purposes of (1), a firm should ensure that it:
- (a) includes significant business activities whether or not they are accounted for on-balance sheet; and
- (b) carries out the exercise of quantification and incorporation both in normal financial conditions and under the stresses required by BIPRU 12.4.1R.
- (3) A firm should ensure that the liquidity costs, benefits and risks are clearly and transparently attributed to business lines and are understood by business line management.
- (4) Contravention of any of (1), (2) or (3) may be relied upon as tending to establish contravention of BIPRU 12.3.4R.
BIPRU 12.3.16
See Notes
Intra-day management of liquidity
BIPRU 12.3.17
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.18
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.19
See Notes
For the purposes of BIPRU 12.3.17R, a firm must ensure that:
- (1) it is able to meet its payment and settlement obligations on a timely basis under both normal financial conditions and under the stresses required by BIPRU 12.4.1R; and
- (2) its arrangements for the management of intra-day liquidity enable it to identify and prioritise the most time-critical payment and settlement obligations.
BIPRU 12.3.20
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.21
See Notes
- (1) A firm should ensure that its intra-day liquidity management arrangements enable it, in relation to the markets in which it is active and the currencies in which it has significant positions, to:
- (a) measure expected daily gross liquidity inflows and outflows, anticipate the intra-day timing of these flows where possible, and forecast the range of potential net funding shortfalls that might arise at different points during the day;
- (b) monitor its intra-day liquidity positions against expected activities and available resources;
- (c) identify gross liquidity inflows and outflows attributable to any correspondent, custodian or settlement agency services provided by that firm;
- (d) manage the timing of its liquidity outflows such that priority is given to that firm's most time-critical obligations;
- (e) deal with unexpected disruptions to its intra-day liquidity flows;
- (f) acquire sufficient intra-day funding such that it is able to meet its most time-critical obligations when expected and other less time-critical obligations as soon as possible thereafter; and
- (g) manage and mobilise collateral as necessary for the purposes of achieving the aim in (f).
- (2) Contravention of any of (1)(a) to (g) may be relied upon as tending to establish contravention of BIPRU 12.3.4R.
Management of collateral
BIPRU 12.3.22
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.22A
See Notes
A firm must distinguish between pledged and unencumbered assets that are available at all times, in particular during emergency situations. A firm must also take into account the legal entity in which assets reside, the country where assets are legally recorded either in a register or in an account as well as their eligibility and must monitor how assets can be mobilised in a timely manner.
[Note: article 86(5) of the CRD]
BIPRU 12.3.22B
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.23
See Notes
For the purposes of BIPRU 12.3.22R, a firm must, in relation to all currencies in which it has significant positions and all jurisdictions in which it carries on significant business activities, ensure that it:
- (1) can calculate all of its collateral positions, including assets currently provided as collateral, relative to the total amount of security required;
- (2) can calculate the amount of unencumbered assets available to it to be provided as collateral;
- (3) can mobilise collateral in a timely manner;
- (4) monitors the location of available collateral;
- (5) takes into account the extent to which counterparties with which it has deposited collateral may have re-hypothecated that collateral;
- (6) has access to adequately diversified sources of collateral;
- (7) assesses the eligibility of each major asset class that it holds for use as collateral with central banks;
- (8) assesses on an ongoing basis the acceptability of its assets to major counterparties and providers of funds in secured funding markets; and
- (9) monitors and manages the impact that the terms of existing funding or security arrangements, such as warranties, covenants, events of default, negative pledges and cross default clauses could have on its ability to mobilise collateral including for use in borrowing under any central bank facility (in particular, emergency liquidity assistance on a secured basis).
BIPRU 12.3.24
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.25
See Notes
- (1) A firm should ensure that its arrangements for the management of liquidity risk:
- (a) enable it to monitor shifts between intra-day and overnight or term collateral usage;
- (b) enable it to appropriately adjust its calculation of available collateral to account for assets that are part of a tied hedge;
- (c) include adequate consideration of the potential for uncertainty around, or disruption to, intra-day asset flows; and
- (d) take into account the potential for additional collateral requirements under the terms of contracts governing existing collateral positions (for example, as a result of a deterioration in its own credit rating).
- (2) Contravention of any of (1)(a) to (d) may be relied upon as tending to establish contravention of BIPRU 12.3.4 R.
Managing liquidity across legal entities, business lines and currencies
BIPRU 12.3.26
See Notes
In complying with BIPRU 12.3.4 R, a firm must ensure that:
- (1) it actively manages its liquidity risk exposures and related funding needs; and
- (2) it takes into account:
- (a) the impact on its own liquidity position of its forming part of a group;
- (b) the need to manage the liquidity position of individual business lines in addition to that of the firm as a whole; and
- (c) the liquidity risk arising from its taking positions in foreign currencies; and
- (3) where it forms part of a group, it understands and has regard to any legal, regulatory, operational or other constraints on the transferability to it of funds and collateral by other entities in that group.
BIPRU 12.3.27
See Notes
A firm must develop methodologies for the identification, measurement, management and monitoring of funding positions. Those methodologies must include the current and projected material cash-flows in and arising from assets, liabilities, off-balance-sheet items, including contingent liabilities and the possible impact of reputational risk.
[Note: article 86(4) of the CRD]
BIPRU 12.3.28
See Notes
Funding diversification and market access
BIPRU 12.3.29
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.30
See Notes
A firm must ensure that its governing body:
- (1) is aware of the composition, characteristics and degree of diversification of its assets and funding sources; and
- (2) regularly reviews its funding strategy in the light of any changes in the environment in which it operates.
BIPRU 12.3.31
See Notes
BIPRU 12.3.32
See Notes
- (1) A firm should ensure that funding diversification is taken into account in that firm's business planning process.
- (2) A firm should ensure that its funding arrangements take into account correlations between market conditions and the ability to access funds from different sources.
- (3) A firm should ensure that in establishing adequate diversification it sets limits on its funding according to the following variables:
- (a) maturity;
- (b) nature of depositor or counterparty;
- (c) levels of secured and unsecured funding;
- (d) instrument type;
- (e) securitisation vehicle;
- (f) currency; and
- (g) geographic market.
- (4) A firm should ensure that it maintains an ongoing presence in its chosen funding markets and strong relationships with its chosen providers of funds.
- (5) A firm should regularly test its capacity to raise funds quickly from its chosen funding sources to provide short, medium and long-term liquidity.
- (6) A firm should ensure that its senior managers identify the main factors that affect its ability to raise funds and should monitor those factors closely to ensure that their estimates of fund raising capacity remain valid.
- (7) Contravention of any of (1) to (6) may be relied upon as tending to establish contravention of BIPRU 12.3.4 R.
BIPRU 12.4
Stress testing and contingency funding
- 01/12/2009
BIPRU 12.4.-2
See Notes
A firm must consider different liquidity risk mitigation tools, including a system of limits and liquidity buffers in order to be able to withstand a range of different stress events and an adequately diversified funding structure and access to funding sources. Those arrangements must be reviewed regularly.
[Note: article 86(7) of the CRD]
Stress testing
BIPRU 12.4.-1
See Notes
A firm must consider alternative scenarios on liquidity positions and on risk mitigants and must review the assumptions underlying decisions concerning the funding position at least annually. For these purposes, alternative scenarios must address, in particular, off-balance sheet items and other contingent liabilities, including those of securitisation special purpose entities (SSPEs) or other special purpose entities, as referred to in the EUCRR, in relation to which the firm acts as sponsor or provides material liquidity support.
[Note: article 86(8) of the CRD]
BIPRU 12.4.1
See Notes
In order to ensure compliance with the overall liquidity adequacy rule and with BIPRU 12.3.4R and BIPRU 12.4.-1 R, a firm must:
- (1) conduct on a regular basis appropriate stress tests so as to:
- (a) identify sources of potential liquidity strain;
- (b) ensure that current liquidity exposures continue to conform to the liquidity risk tolerance established by that firm's governing body; and
- (c) identify the effects on that firm's assumptions about pricing; and
- (2) analyse the separate and combined impact of possible future liquidity stresses on its:
- (a) cash flows;
- (b) liquidity position;
- (c) profitability; and
- (d) solvency.
BIPRU 12.4.2
See Notes
BIPRU 12.4.3
See Notes
BIPRU 12.4.4
See Notes
For the purposes of BIPRU 12.4.2R, a review should take into account:
BIPRU 12.4.5A
See Notes
BIPRU 12.4.6
See Notes
BIPRU 12.4.7
See Notes
In conducting its stress testing, a firm should also, where relevant, consider the impact of its chosen stresses on the appropriateness of its assumptions relating to:
- (1) correlations between funding markets;
- (2) the effectiveness of diversification across its chosen sources of funding;
- (3) additional margin calls and collateral requirements;
- (4) contingent claims, including potential draws on committed lines extended to third parties or to other entities in that firm's group;
- (5) liquidity absorbed by off-balance sheet vehicles and activities (including conduit financing);
- (6) the transferability of liquidity resources;
- (7) access to central bank market operations and liquidity facilities;
- (8) estimates of future balance sheet growth;
- (9) the continued availability of market liquidity in a number of currently highly liquid markets;
- (10) ability to access secured and unsecured funding (including retail deposits);
- (11) currency convertibility; and
- (12) access to payment or settlement systems on which the firm relies.
BIPRU 12.4.8
See Notes
- (1) A firm should ensure that the results of its stress tests are:
- (a) reviewed by its senior managers;
- (b) reported to that firm's governing body, specifically highlighting any vulnerabilities identified and proposing appropriate remedial action;
- (c) reflected in the processes, strategies and systems established in accordance with BIPRU 12.3.4R;
- (d) used to develop effective contingency funding plans;
- (e) integrated into that firm's business planning process and day-to-day risk management; and
- (f) taken into account when setting internal limits for the management of that firm's liquidity risk exposure.
- (2) Contravention of any of (1)(a) to (f) may be relied upon as tending to establish contravention of BIPRU 12.3.4 R.
BIPRU 12.4.9
See Notes
Contingency funding plans
BIPRU 12.4.10
See Notes
A firm must adjust its strategies, internal policies and limits on liquidity risk and develop an effective contingency funding plan, taking into account the outcome of the alternative scenarios referred to in BIPRU 12.4.-1 R.
[Note: article 86(10) of the CRD]
BIPRU 12.4.11
See Notes
A firm must have in place liquidity recovery plans setting out adequate strategies and proper implementation measures in order to address possible liquidity shortfalls, including in relation to branches established in another EEA State. Those plans must be tested at least annually, updated on the basis of the outcome of the alternative scenarios set out in BIPRU 12.4.-1 R, and be reported to and approved by the firm's governing body, so that internal policies and processes can be adjusted accordingly. A firm must take the necessary operational steps in advance to ensure that liquidity recovery plans can be implemented immediately.
[Note: article 86(11) (part) of the CRD]
BIPRU 12.4.11A
See Notes
For a firm that is a CRD credit institution the operational steps referred to in BIPRU 12.4.11 R must include holding collateral immediately available for central bank funding. This includes holding collateral where necessary in the currency of another EEA State, or currency of a non-EEA state to which the firm has exposures, and where operationally necessary within the territory of a Host State or non-EEA state to whose currency it is exposed.
[Note: article 86(11) (part) of the CRD]
- 01/01/2014
BIPRU 12.4.12
See Notes
BIPRU 12.4.13
See Notes
A firm must ensure that its contingency funding plan:
- (1) outlines strategies, policies and plans to manage a range of stresses;
- (2) establishes a clear allocation of roles and clear lines of management responsibility;
- (3) is formally documented;
- (4) includes clear invocation and escalation procedures;
- (5) is regularly tested and updated to ensure that it remains operationally robust;
- (6) outlines how that firm will meet time-critical payments on an intra-day basis in circumstances where intra-day liquidity resources become scarce;
- (7) outlines that firm's operational arrangements for managing a retail funding run;
- (8) in relation to each of the sources of funding identified for use in emergency situations, is based on a sufficiently accurate assessment of:
- (a) the amount of funding that can be raised from that source; and
- (b) the time needed to raise funding from that source;
- (9) is sufficiently robust to withstand simultaneous disruptions in a range of payment and settlement systems;
- (10) outlines how that firm will manage both internal communications and those with its external stakeholders; and
- (11) establishes mechanisms to ensure that the firm's governing body and senior managers receive management information that is both relevant and timely.
BIPRU 12.4.14
See Notes
- (1) In designing a contingency funding plan a firm should ensure that it takes into account:
- (a) the impact of stressed market conditions on its ability to sell or securitise assets;
- (b) the impact of extensive or complete loss of typically available market funding options;
- (c) the financial, reputational and any other additional consequences for that firm arising from the execution of the contingency funding plan itself;
- (d) its ability to transfer liquid assets having regard to any legal, regulatory or operational constraints; and
- (e) its ability to raise additional funding from central bank market operations and liquidity facilities.
- (2) Contravention of any of (1)(a) to (e) may be relied upon as tending to establish contravention of BIPRU 12.3.4R.
BIPRU 12.4.15
See Notes
BIPRU 12.4.16
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5
Individual Liquidity Adequacy Standards
- 01/12/2009
Individual Liquidity Adequacy Assessment
BIPRU 12.5.1
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.2
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.3
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.4
See Notes
A firm must ensure that:
- (1) it regularly carries out an ILAA;
- (2) it makes a written record of its ILAA;
- (3) its ILAA is proportionate to the nature, scale and complexity of its activities;
- (4) its ILAA takes into account whole-firm and group-wide liquidity resources only to the extent that reliance on these is permitted by the appropriate regulator;
- (5) its ILAA includes an assessment of the results of the stress tests required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R; and
- (6) its ILAA includes an assessment of the firm's compliance with BIPRU 12.3 and BIPRU 12.4, including the results of the stress tests required by the rules in BIPRU 12.4.
BIPRU 12.5.5
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.6
See Notes
A firm must ensure that in carrying out its ILAA it considers how that firm's liquidity resources change as a result of:
- (1) the stress in BIPRU 12.5.8 R (the first liquidity stress);
- (2) the stress in BIPRU 12.5.11 R (the second liquidity stress); and
- (3) the first and second liquidity stresses occurring simultaneously.
ILAA stresses
BIPRU 12.5.7
See Notes
First liquidity stress
BIPRU 12.5.8
See Notes
The first liquidity stress to which BIPRU 12.5.6R refers is an unforeseen, name-specific, liquidity stress in which:
- (1) financial market participants and retail depositors consider that in the short-term the firm will be or is likely to be unable to meet its liabilities as they fall due;
- (2) the firm's counterparties reduce the amount of intra-day credit which they are willing to extend to it;
- (3) the firm ceases to have access to foreign currency spot and swap markets; and
- (4) over the longer-term the firm's obligations linked to its credit rating crystallise as a result of a reduction in that credit rating.
BIPRU 12.5.9
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.10
See Notes
Second liquidity stress
BIPRU 12.5.11
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.12
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.5.11R, a firm must assume that the second liquidity stress is characterised by:
- (1) uncertainty as to the accuracy of the valuation attributed to that firm's assets and those of its counterparties;
- (2) inability to realise, or ability to realise only at excessive cost, particular classes of assets, including those which represent claims on other participants in the financial markets or which were originated by them;
- (3) uncertainty as to the ability of a significant number of firms to ensure that they can meet their liabilities as they fall due; and
- (4) risk aversion among participants in the markets on which the firm relies for funding.
ILAA methodology
BIPRU 12.5.13
See Notes
In carrying out the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6R, a firm must:
- (1) analyse each of the sources of risk identified in BIPRU 12.5.14R;
- (2) record the evidence which supports any behavioural assumptions that it makes in carrying out those stress tests;
- (3) record the evidence which supports its assessment of the adequacy of its liquid assets buffer; and
- (4) identify those of the measures set out in its contingency funding plan that it would implement.
BIPRU 12.5.14
See Notes
The sources of risk referred to in BIPRU 12.5.13R are:
- (1) wholesale secured and unsecured funding risk;
- (2) retail funding risk;
- (3) intra-day liquidity risk;
- (4) intra-group liquidity risk;
- (5) cross-currency liquidity risk;
- (6) off-balance sheet liquidity risk;
- (7) franchise-viability risk;
- (8) marketable assets risk;
- (9) non-marketable assets risk; and
- (10) funding concentration risk.
Wholesale secured and unsecured funding risk
BIPRU 12.5.15
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.16
See Notes
In assessing its wholesale funding risk, a firm must:
- (1) identify its wholesale liabilities;
- (2) determine how those liabilities behave under normal financial conditions;
- (3) assess how they will behave under the stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6R; and
- (4) divide its wholesale liabilities into funding which the firm assesses as having a higher than average likelihood of withdrawal in response to actual or perceived changes in the firm's credit-worthiness (Type A wholesale funding) and other funding (Type B wholesale funding).
BIPRU 12.5.17
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.18
See Notes
In the appropriate regulator's view, Type A wholesale funding is likely to include at least funding which:
- (1) is accepted from a credit institution, local authority, insurance undertaking, pension fund, money market fund, asset manager (including a hedge fund manager), government-sponsored agency, sovereign government, or sophisticated non-financial corporation; or
- (2) is accepted through the treasury function of a sophisticated non-financial corporation which may be assumed to respond swiftly to negative news about a firm's credit-worthiness; or
- (3) is accepted on wholesale market terms as a part of a firm's money market operations; or
- (4) is accepted from a depositor with whom a firm does not have a long-established relationship or to whom a firm does not supply a range of services; or
- (5) is accepted from overseas counterparties (other than those in the country or territory of incorporation of a firm's parent undertaking or, in the case of a UK branch, of the firm of which it forms part); or
- (6) is obtained through unsecured debt instruments (such as certificates of deposit, medium-term notes and commercial paper); or
- (7) is not obtained through repo against assets of the type described in BIPRU 12.7.2R (1) or BIPRU 12.7.2R (2); or
- (8) is obtained from counterparties with a relatively low creditor seniority on the liquidation of the firm.
BIPRU 12.5.19
See Notes
Retail funding risk
BIPRU 12.5.20
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.21
See Notes
For the purpose of assessing its retail funding risk, a firm must:
- (1) estimate the gross retail outflows that could occur under the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6R;
- (2) identify the stress, or combination of stresses, to which it considers its retail funding to be most vulnerable and estimate the gross retail outflows that could occur under that stress or combination of stresses; and
- (3) divide its retail funding into funding which the firm assesses as having a higher than average likelihood of withdrawal in response to actual or perceived changes in the firm's credit-worthiness (Type A retail funding) and other funding (Type B retail funding).
BIPRU 12.5.22
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.23
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.24
See Notes
A firm should also be mindful that its retail funding profile is unlikely to be constant. In carrying out its ILAA, a firm should have regard to any changes to its retail funding profile since the previous ILAA and also to the possible impact of any future changes on its ability to maintain retail funding during periods of stress. In its ILAA submission to the appropriate regulator, a firm should include an analysis of:
- (1) its retail funding profile as at the date of its ILAA;
- (2) its retail funding profile over the twelve months preceding its ILAA;
- (3) its projected retail funding profile over the twelve months following the date of its ILAA; and
- (4) its approach to assessing which of its retail funding it has classed as Type A retail funding and which as Type B retail funding.
BIPRU 12.5.25
See Notes
In the appropriate regulator's view Type A retail funding is likely to include at least funding which:
- (1) has been accepted through the internet; or
- (2) is considered to have a more than average sensitivity to interest rate changes (such as a deposit whose acceptance can reasonably be attributed to the use of price-focused advertising by the firm accepting the deposit); or
- (3) in relation to any individual depositor exceeds to a significant extent the amount of that individuals deposits with the accepting firm that are covered by a national deposit guarantee scheme; or
- (4) is not accepted from a depositor with whom the firm has had a long relationship; or
- (5) is accepted from retail depositors who can access their deposits before their residual contractual maturity subject to a loss of interest or payment of another form of early access charge (as a general proposition, the behaviour of liabilities to retail depositors is likely to depend in part on the contractual terms and conditions which give rise to those liabilities); or
- (6) is not held in an account which is maintained for transactional purposes.
Intra-day liquidity risk
BIPRU 12.5.26
See Notes
For the purpose of assessing its intra-day liquidity risk arising from its direct participation in a payment or settlement system, a firm must in relation to each such system in which it participates:
- (1) calculate on an intra-day basis the net amounts of collateral and cash required by that firm to fund participation in that system; and
- (2) estimate how the amounts in (1) could change under the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R.
BIPRU 12.5.27
See Notes
For the purpose of calculating the net amounts of collateral and cash under BIPRU 12.5.26R, a firm should separately analyse:
- (1) the amounts of collateral and cash needed in relation to both its own payments and those of its customers; and
- (2) the intra-day timing of the payment of cash and the posting of the collateral, including the time at which the demand for its collateral and cash is greatest.
BIPRU 12.5.28
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.5.26R, a firm should ensure that it takes into account, in both normal financial conditions and in periods of stress, the effect of:
- (1) other participants in a payment system withholding some or all of the payments expected from them; and
- (2) its customers increasing either or both the volume and value of their payments.
BIPRU 12.5.29
See Notes
At the same time as it carries out the calculation and estimation in BIPRU 12.5.26 R, a firm which participates directly in one or more payment or settlement systems must also estimate the impact on its liquidity position of the customer to which it has the largest intra-day credit exposure defaulting on its payment obligations to the firm:
- (1) under normal financial conditions; and
- (2) under the stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R.
BIPRU 12.5.30
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.31
See Notes
A firm must, as part of its ILAA submission to the appropriate regulator:
- (1) identify those payment and settlement systems in which it is a direct participant; and
- (2) provide details of the intra-day credit policies that it applies, including the criteria against which it sets credit limits, when extending credit to a customer which is not a direct participant in the payment or settlement system in question.
BIPRU 12.5.32
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.5.31R, the appropriate regulator would expect a firm, in relation to each payment or settlement system in which it participates directly, to provide details of:
- (1) that firm's charges for providing intra-day credit;
- (2) any collateral requirements which it applies to its customers;
- (3) the credit limits that it imposes (and the circumstances, if any, in which credit may be provided notwithstanding a limit breach);
- (4) the extent to which the customers of that firm make use of the credit extended to them; and
- (5) where relevant, the points during the day at which a customer is required to settle, or provide assets as collateral to cover, that firm's credit exposure to it.
BIPRU 12.5.33
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.34R applies to a firm which:
- (1) is not a direct participant in a given payment or settlement system;
- (2) is a customer of a firm that is a direct participant in such a system for the purposes of gaining access to that system; and
- (3) receives intra-day credit from that participant firm or prefunds its account with such a firm.
BIPRU 12.5.34
See Notes
For the purpose of assessing its intra-day liquidity risk a firm to which BIPRU 12.5.33R applies must assess the effect on its own position of a participant firm from which it receives intra-day credit or with which it has a prefunded account being unable to perform its obligations to that firm:
- (1) under normal financial conditions; and
- (2) under the stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R.
BIPRU 12.5.35
See Notes
As part of its ILAA submission to the appropriate regulator , a firm to which BIPRU 12.5.33R applies should include:
- (1) details of any alternative arrangements that it has in place to ensure that it continues to be able to meet its liabilities as they fall due in the circumstances set out in BIPRU 12.5.34R; and
- (2) details of the policies governing the use of intra-day credit provided to it by a firm which is a direct participant in a given payment or settlement system, including details of the criteria against which that participant will decide whether to reduce or cease the provision of intra-day credit.
Intra-group liquidity risk
BIPRU 12.5.36
See Notes
Where a firm has an intra-group liquidity modification permitting it to rely on liquidity from other members of its group in order to satisfy the overall liquidity adequacy rule, or may be exposed to calls on its own liquidity resources from others in its group, then in assessing its intra-group liquidity risk it must:
- (1) take into account:
- (a) the extent to which it and other entities in its group have access to central bank funding;
- (b) in relation to any group entity on which a firm relies for liquidity support, the legal and regulatory regime to which that entity is subject, in particular that covering liquidity regulation; and
- (c) the contractual arrangements governing any agreed forms of intra-group liquidity support (including committed funding lines); and
- (2) assume that in periods of stress, group entities will not repay loans or deposits made by the firm to them, but that the firm will meet its liabilities that fall due to other group entities during the period of the relevant stress.
BIPRU 12.5.37
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.38
See Notes
In relation to an incoming EEA firm or third country BIPRU firm which does not have a whole-firm liquidity modification, that firm must assess the risk that its UK branch may be exposed to calls on liquidity under its control from its head office:
- (1) in normal financial conditions; and
- (2) under the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R.
BIPRU 12.5.39
See Notes
Cross-currency liquidity risk
BIPRU 12.5.40
See Notes
For the purpose of assessing its cross-currency liquidity risk, a firm must:
- (1) in relation to each currency in which it has significant positions, calculate its gross outflows and gross inflows having regard to their respective maturities;
- (2) where it identifies a net outflow in (1), assess how it will fund that outflow; and
- (3) estimate how the amounts in (1) and the assessment in (2) could change under the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6R.
BIPRU 12.5.41
See Notes
A firm must, as part of its ILAA submission to the appropriate regulator, in relation to each currency in which it has significant positions:
- (1) identify the type of financial instruments which that firm uses to raise funding in that currency;
- (2) identify the main counterparties which provide funding to that firm in that currency; and
- (3) describe the arrangements that it has in place to fund net outflows in that currency on a timely basis.
Off-balance sheet liquidity risk
BIPRU 12.5.42
See Notes
For the purpose of assessing its off-balance sheet liquidity risk, a firm must:
- (1) identify all off-balance sheet activities that might affect its cash flows;
- (2) calculate the effect on its cash flows of those activities in normal financial conditions; and
- (3) estimate the effect on its cash flows of those activities under the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6R.
BIPRU 12.5.43
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.44
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.5.42R, a firm must in particular consider the impact on its cash flows of:
- (1) derivatives positions;
- (2) contingent liabilities;
- (3) commitments given; and
- (4) liquidity facilities to support securitisation programmes.
BIPRU 12.5.45
See Notes
In relation to derivatives positions, a firm should:
- (1) assess the effect on its cash flows arising from the maturity, exercise and repricing of derivatives in which it holds a position, including the impact of counterparties:
- (a) who may require the posting of additional margin or collateral in the event of a decline in that firm's credit rating;
- (b) who may require the posting of additional margin or collateral (or the return to them of margin or collateral) in the event of a change in the value of a derivative or of the posted collateral;
- (c) who (in the case of those that are any of a recognised investment exchange, a designated investment exchange or a recognised clearing house) may require the posting of additional margin in volatile market conditions;
- (d) who may choose to terminate an OTC derivative which they have entered into with the firm rather than post additional margin or collateral;
- (e) who, in periods of name-specific liquidity stress experienced by the firm, may choose to terminate out of the money derivatives which they have entered into with that firm; and
- (f) who, in periods of stress, may choose to post less liquid collateral than would likely be the case in normal financial conditions; and
- (2) assume that under the stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R there may be uncertainty as to the accuracy of the valuation attributed to a derivative contract.
BIPRU 12.5.46
See Notes
In relation to its contingent liabilities, a firm should:
- (1) calculate the impact on its cash flows of those of its contingent obligations that will be triggered in normal financial conditions; and
- (2) estimate the impact on its cash flows of those of its contingent obligations that may be triggered under the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R.
BIPRU 12.5.47
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.48
See Notes
In relation to its commitments (other than liquidity facilities to support securitisation programmes)), a firm should:
- (1) calculate its maximum contractual exposure arising from those commitments;
- (2) calculate the effect on its cash flows of the drawing of those commitments in normal financial conditions; and
- (3) estimate the effect on its cash flows of the drawing of those commitments under the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R.
BIPRU 12.5.49
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.5.48G, a firm should:
- (1) consider its contractual exposure to the following types of commitment: committed funding facilities, undrawn loans and advances to wholesale counterparties, mortgages that have been agreed but not yet been drawn down, credit cards, overdrafts (and other retail lending facilities);
- (2) ensure that its analysis of each type of commitment is sufficiently granular to enable that firm to:
- (a) assess the circumstances in which counterparties will draw down;
- (b) identify the extent of any correlations as between counterparties in deciding whether or not to draw down;
- (c) identify the extent to which decisions by the firm's counterparties to draw down may be correlated to a decline in the firm's own liquidity resources; and
- (d) assess the proportion of its total commitments attributable to particular counterparties; and
- (3) assess the extent to which draw down requires the counterparty in question to deliver to the firm collateral in the form of marketable assets, while also assessing the anticipated effect of such a requirement on:
- (a) the likelihood that the counterparty in question will draw down; and
- (b) the firm's liquidity position if the counterparty in question delivers collateral on draw down; and
- (4) assess the impact on its cash flows of its commitment counterparties experiencing liquidity stress at the same time as that firm is subject to the stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R.
BIPRU 12.5.50
See Notes
In relation to liquidity facilities to support securitisation programmes, a firm should:
- (1) assess the extent of its contractual obligations to provide liquidity support to sponsored and third-party structured vehicles;
- (2) identify the circumstances in which support will, or is likely to, be called; and
- (3) assess the impact on that firm's cash flows of such support being called:
- (a) in normal financial conditions; and
- (b) under the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6R.
BIPRU 12.5.51
See Notes
Franchise-viability risk
BIPRU 12.5.52
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.53
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.54
See Notes
In complying with BIPRU 12.5.52R, a firm should assess the extent to which it can and realistically will:
- (1) restrict new retail lines without significantly damaging customer relationships;
- (2) restrict new wholesale lending without significantly damaging its ability to resume such lending following the period of stress in question;
- (3) cease to provide liquidity support to its sponsored vehicles;
- (4) decline to exercise call options whose effect if not exercised might be to cause market participants to question the firm's ability to continue to meet its liabilities as they fall due; and
- (5) continue any regular programme of buying back its issued debt.
BIPRU 12.5.55
See Notes
Marketable assets risk
BIPRU 12.5.56
See Notes
For the purpose of assessing its exposure to marketable assets risk, a firm must assess how the marketable assets comprised in its liquidity resources will behave:
- (1) under normal financial conditions; and
- (2) under the liquidity stresses identified in BIPRU 12.5.6R, including an assessment of the effect of these stresses on:
- (a) its ability to derive funding from its marketable assets in a timely fashion;
- (b) the potential for using those assets as collateral to raise secured funding and the size of the haircut likely to be required by a counterparty;
- (c) the likelihood and extent of forced-sale loss; and
- (d) the effect on its business activities of any changes in (a) to (c) identified as likely to result from those liquidity stresses.
BIPRU 12.5.57
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.58
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.59
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.60
See Notes
The behaviour of a firm's marketable assets under conditions of stress is likely to depend on a number of different factors, including:
- (1) the depth and competitiveness of the market for the marketable asset in question, the size of the bid-offer spread, the presence of committed market-makers, the nature of the information available to potential counterparties, the degree of structural complexity of the assets in question and the assets eligibility in central bank market operations and liquidity facilities; and
- (2) that firm's operational capability to generate funding from those assets in a timely manner.
BIPRU 12.5.61
See Notes
In considering its operational capability to generate funding from assets, a firm should be aware that its capability in this regard is likely to depend on:
- (1) whether it has in place arrangements for repo;
- (2) the extent to which that firm already holds a significant proportion of the market for the marketable asset in question;
- (3) the extent to which that firm periodically realises some or all of its holdings of that asset; and
- (4) that firm's accounting treatment and valuation of that asset.
BIPRU 12.5.62
See Notes
For the purpose of its ILAA submission to the appropriate regulator, a firm must provide the appropriate regulator with an analysis of the profile of its marketable assets as at the date of submission in a way that:
- (1) separately identifies its marketable assets according to asset class, maturity, currency, their eligibility for use in central bank monetary operations and liquidity facilities and any other characteristic that it uses in its liquidity management; and
- (2) assesses the degree of diversification achieved across its marketable assets.
Non-marketable assets risk
BIPRU 12.5.63
See Notes
For the purpose of assessing its exposure to non-marketable assets risk, a firm must assess how the non-marketable assets in its liquidity resources will behave:
- (1) under normal financial conditions; and
- (2) under the liquidity stresses required by BIPRU 12.5.6 R, including an assessment of the effect of these stresses on:
BIPRU 12.5.64
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.65
See Notes
BIPRU 12.2.5 G notes that a firm should include in its liquidity resources sufficient assets which are marketable or otherwise realisable. The appropriate regulator considers those assets which are capable of realisation, but other than through repo or outright sale, as non-marketable assets. To the extent that these assets may behave differently under stress conditions than under normal financial conditions, a firm is subject to non-marketable assets risk. Different forms of non-marketable assets risk arise, particularly in relation to:
- (1) retail loans; and
- (2) unsecured wholesale assets.
BIPRU 12.5.66
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.67
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.68
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.69
See Notes
For the purpose of the assessment in BIPRU 12.5.67R, a firm should in particular have regard to the risk associated with:
- (1) repayment defaults; and
- (2) exercise by its counterparties of contractual rights to repay before the expected maturity date or to delay repayment beyond that date.
BIPRU 12.5.70
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.71
See Notes
The assessment required by BIPRU 12.5.63R is particularly important for a firm which:
- (1) ordinarily does not raise funding from its non-marketable assets in this way; or
- (2) places proportionately greater reliance on securitisation programmes as compared to other funding strategies to generate liquidity.
BIPRU 12.5.72
See Notes
In complying with BIPRU 12.5.63R, a firm must in particular assess the non-marketable assets risk associated with asset securitisations, having regard to:
- (1) the existence of early amortisation triggers and the consequences of their operation; and
- (2) its financing of assets which are warehoused prior to their securitisation.
BIPRU 12.5.73
See Notes
Funding concentration risk
BIPRU 12.5.74
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.75
See Notes
BIPRU 12.5.76
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.5.75R, a firm should take into account the extent to which its liquidity resources are diversified according to:
- (1) type of instrument and product;
- (2) currency;
- (3) counterparty;
- (4) liability term structure; and
- (5) market for their realisation (provided that such market is open to the firm as counterparty).
BIPRU 12.5.77
See Notes
A firm should be aware that the degree of diversification in its liquidity resources can be compromised, particularly in periods of stress, by a number of factors, including:
- (1) reduced or terminated funding provision from some counterparties as a result of that firm's credit-rating being downgraded or its financial condition deteriorating;
- (2) disputes over the terms of legally binding commitments to lend which delay the provision of funding;
- (3) markets previously used by the firm for raising funding ceasing to be open or operating but at reduced capacity;
- (4) reliance on a small number of brokers to access funding sources; and
- (5) positive correlations in the behaviour of different instruments and products.
BIPRU 12.6
Simplified ILAS
- 01/12/2009
BIPRU 12.6.1
See Notes
BIPRU 12.6.2
See Notes
An ILAS BIPRU firm that wishes to operate the simplified ILAS approach must:
- (1) satisfy the conditions in BIPRU 12.6.6R to BIPRU 12.6.8R; and
- (2) obtain a simplified ILAS waiver from the appropriate regulator.
BIPRU 12.6.3
See Notes
BIPRU 12.6.4
See Notes
BIPRU 12.6.5
See Notes
Simplified ILAS conditions
BIPRU 12.6.6
See Notes
The first condition is that:
- (1) no less than 75% of the firm's total liabilities are accounted for by retail deposits and:
- (a) the firm's total assets do not exceed 250 million; or
- (b) the firms total assets do not exceed 1 billion and no less than 70% of those assets are accounted for by:
- (i) assets of the kind that fall into BIPRU 12.7.2 R and which the firm counts towards its simplified buffer requirement; and
- (ii) retail loans; or
- (c) no less than 70% of the firm's total assets are accounted for by retail loans; or
- (d) no less than 70% of the firm's total assets are accounted for by:
- (i) money-market instruments with a residual contractual maturity of three months or less; or
- (ii) sight deposits held with a credit institution; or
- (iii) term deposits with a residual contractual maturity of three months or less held with a credit institution; or
- (2) no less than 80% of the firm's total liabilities are accounted for by liabilities owed to its parent undertaking and the amount of the firm's total assets does not exceed 1 billion.
- (a) [deleted]
- (b) [deleted]
- (c) [deleted]
- (3) [deleted]
BIPRU 12.6.6A
See Notes
BIPRU 12.6.7
See Notes
In this section:
- (1) a retail deposit is a deposit accepted from a consumer; and
- (2) SME deposits are deposits accepted from, and account balances where the account holders are, small and medium-sized enterprises (or partnerships or sole traders or charities which would be small and medium-sized enterprises if they were companies).
BIPRU 12.6.8
See Notes
Size of the simplified buffer requirement
BIPRU 12.6.9
See Notes
- (1) A simplified ILAS BIPRU firm must ensure that the size of its liquid assets buffer is at all times greater than or equal to 50% of the amount produced by adding:
- (a) the wholesale net cash outflow component;
- (b) the retail and SME deposit component; and
- (c) the credit pipeline component.
- (2) This is the simplified buffer requirement.
The wholesale net cash outflow component
BIPRU 12.6.10
See Notes
- (1) The wholesale net cash outflow component is a firm's peak cumulative wholesale net cash outflow over the next three months where the peak is established by:
- (a) calculating the daily wholesale net cash flow by reference to a firm's wholesale assets maturing that day and its wholesale liabilities falling due on that day;
- (b) for each of the business days in the next three months, calculating the cumulative total of such daily net cash flows as at the business day in question; and
- (c) identifying the minimum cumulative total figure out of all of the cumulative total figures calculated in accordance with (b).
- (2) The figure identified in (1)(c) is the peak cumulative wholesale net cash outflow.
- (3) For the purpose of calculating the peak cumulative wholesale net cash outflow, a firm must:
- (a) exclude from the calculation in (1)(a) cash flows attributable to repo and reverse repo, forward sales, forward purchases, redemptions and any other transactions entered into by the firm where the security leg of the transaction in question is in respect of securities of the type described in BIPRU 12.7.2R (1) and (2);
- (b) include wholesale cash outflows in that calculation according to their earliest contractual maturity;
- (c) exclude wholesale cash flows attributable to reserves in the form of sight deposits with a central bank and designated money market funds that it includes in its liquid assets buffer in accordance with the rules on asset eligibility in BIPRU 12.7; and
- (d) exclude any retail deposits or SME deposits.
The retail and SME deposit component
BIPRU 12.6.11
See Notes
- (1) The retail and SME deposit component is the sum represented by:
- (a) 20% of a firm's Type A retail deposits;
- (b) 10% of a firm's Type B retail deposits; and
- (c) 20% of a firm's SME deposits.
- (2) A firm must:
- (a) assess the likelihood that retail deposits that it holds will be withdrawn in response to actual or perceived changes in the firm's credit-worthiness;
- (b) calculate the amount of retail deposits that it assesses as having a higher than average likelihood of withdrawal in the circumstances described in (a) (Type A retail deposits); and
- (c) class all other of its retail deposits as Type B retail deposits.
BIPRU 12.6.12
See Notes
In the appropriate regulator's view, a Type A retail deposit is likely to include one which:
- (1) has been accepted through the internet; or
- (2) is considered to have a more than average sensitivity to interest rate changes (such as a deposit whose acceptance can reasonably be attributed to the use of price-focused advertising by the firm accepting the deposit); or
- (3) in relation to any individual depositor exceeds to a significant extent the amount of that individuals deposits with the accepting firm that are covered by a national deposit guarantee scheme; or
- (4) is not accepted from a depositor with whom the firm has had a long relationship; or
- (5) is accepted from retail depositors who can access their deposits before their residual contractual maturity subject to a loss of interest or payment of another form of early access charge (as a general proposition, the behaviour of liabilities to retail depositors is likely to depend in part on the contractual terms and conditions which give rise to those liabilities); or
- (6) is not held in an account which is maintained for transactional purposes.
BIPRU 12.6.13
See Notes
Before applying for a simplified ILAS waiver, a firm must prepare a written policy statement recording its approach to assessing the likelihood of withdrawal of its retail deposits in the circumstances described in BIPRU 12.6.11R (2)(a) and ensure that:
- (1) the firm's governing body approves and conducts appropriate reviews of the policy statement; and
- (2) the firm submits a copy of the policy statement to its usual supervisory contact at the appropriate regulator.
BIPRU 12.6.14
See Notes
The credit pipeline component
BIPRU 12.6.15
See Notes
Buffer securities restriction
BIPRU 12.6.16
See Notes
- (1) A simplified ILAS BIPRU firm may only include in its liquid assets buffer eligible government and designated multilateral development bank debt securities up to the value of the buffer securities restriction.
- (2) For the purpose of calculating the buffer securities restriction, a firm must:
- (a) calculate its daily net flow in government and designated multilateral development bank debt securities eligible as classes of assets for inclusion in the firm's liquid assets buffer;
- (b) for each of the business days in the next three months calculate the cumulative total of such daily securities flows, including the opening balance, as at the business day in question; and
- (c) identify the minimum cumulative total figure out of all of the cumulative total figures calculated in accordance with (b).
- (3) For the purpose of (2)(a), a firm must include:
- (a) all contractual inflows and outflows of eligible debt securities arising from repo, reverse repo, forward sales, forward purchases, redemptions and any other transactions involving those securities; and
- (b) those cash flows excluded under BIPRU 12.6.10 R (3)(a).
BIPRU 12.6.17
See Notes
Foreign currency positions
BIPRU 12.6.18
See Notes
- (1) Subject to (3), a simplified ILAS BIPRU firm that has assets or liabilities denominated in either or both euros and United States dollars must carry out separate calculations under BIPRU 12.6.9R in relation to its positions in each of those currencies, in addition to that which it carries out in relation to its sterling positions (if any).
- (2) A firm to which (1) applies must ensure that, for the purpose of meeting the simplified buffer requirement, it holds in its liquid assets buffer assets denominated in either or both euros and United States dollars (as relevant) greater than or equal to the amount produced by the calculation in the corresponding currency required under (1), in addition to any sterling liquid assets that it is required to hold in its buffer in respect of its sterling positions.
- (3) Paragraph (1) does not apply to a simplified ILAS BIPRU firm that hedges fully its positions in either or both euros and United States dollars such that the firm is not exposed to any cross-currency liquidity risk in respect of those positions.
Content of the simplified ILAS liquid assets buffer
BIPRU 12.6.19
See Notes
BIPRU 12.6.20
See Notes
ILSA
BIPRU 12.6.21
See Notes
- (1) A simplified ILAS BIPRU firm must regularly carry out an ILSA which contains an assessment of the firm's compliance with the standards set out in BIPRU 12.3 and BIPRU 12.4, including the results of the stress tests required by the rules in BIPRU 12.4.
- (2) The firm must make a written record of its ILSA.
- (3) The ILSA must be proportionate to the nature, scale and complexity of that firm's activities.
- (4) The ILSA must take into account group-wide liquidity resources only to the extent that reliance on these is permitted by the appropriate regulator.
BIPRU 12.6.22
See Notes
BIPRU 12.7
Liquid assets buffer
- 01/12/2009
BIPRU 12.7.1
See Notes
BIPRU 12.7.2
See Notes
For the purpose of satisfying BIPRU 12.2.8R, a firm to which this section applies may include in its liquid assets buffer only:
- (1) high quality debt securities issued by a government or central bank;
- (2) securities issued by a designated multilateral development bank;
- (3) reserves in the form of sight deposits with a central bank of the kind specified in BIPRU 12.7.5R and BIPRU 12.7.6R; and
- (4) in the case of a simplified ILAS BIPRU firm only, investments in a designated money market fund.
BIPRU 12.7.3
See Notes
Subject to BIPRU 12.7.4R, for the purpose of BIPRU 12.7.2R (1), a firm may include only a debt security which is:
- (1) issued by the central government or central bank of an EEA State; or
- (2) issued by the central government or central bank of Canada, the Commonwealth of Australia, Japan, Switzerland or the United States of America.
BIPRU 12.7.4
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.7.3R, a firm may not include a debt security unless:
- (1) the central government or central bank in question has been assessed by at least two eligible ECAIs as having a credit rating associated with credit quality step 1 in the table set out in BIPRU 12 Annex 1R (Mapping of credit assessments of ECAIs to credit quality steps); and
- (2) that debt security is either:
- (a) denominated in the domestic currency of the country in question; or
- (b) denominated in a currency other than the domestic currency, provided it is denominated in any of Canadian dollars, euros, Japanese yen, sterling, Swiss francs or United States dollars.
BIPRU 12.7.5
See Notes
Subject to BIPRU 12.7.6R, for the purpose of BIPRU 12.7.2R (3) a firm may include only reserves in the form of sight deposits held by the firm with the central bank of:
- (1) an EEA State; or
- (2) Canada, the Commonwealth of Australia, Japan, Switzerland or the United States of America.
BIPRU 12.7.6
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.7.5R, a firm may not include reserves held at a central bank unless:
- (1) the central bank in question has been assessed by at least two eligible ECAIs as having a credit rating associated with credit quality step 1 in the table set out in BIPRU 12 Annex 1R (Mapping of credit assessments of ECAIs to credit quality steps); and
- (2) those reserves are denominated in the domestic currency of the central bank in question.
BIPRU 12.7.6A
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.7.2R (2), a firm may not include securities issued by a designated multilateral development bank unless:
- (1) the designated multilateral development bank in question has been assessed by at least two eligible ECAIs as having a credit rating associated with credit quality step 1 in the table set out in BIPRU 12 Annex 1R (Mapping of credit assessments of ECAIs to credit quality steps); and
- (2) those securities are denominated in any of Canadian dollars, euros, Japanese yen, sterling, Swiss francs or United States dollars.
BIPRU 12.7.7
See Notes
BIPRU 12.7.8
See Notes
BIPRU 12.7.9
See Notes
For the purposes of BIPRU 12.7.2R (1) and (2), a firm must only count securities:
- (1) which are unencumbered;
- (2)
- (a) to which it has legal title; or
- (b) to which a central bank has legal title but which meet the requirements of BIPRU 12.7.9AR (1), subject to BIPRU 12.7.9AR (2); and
- (3) which that firm realises on a regular basis.
BIPRU 12.7.9A
See Notes
- (1) For the purposes of BIPRU 12.7.9R (2)(b) the requirements are that:
- (a) the securities are in excess of the amount of collateral required to be held by that central bank; and
- (b) the firm is entitled to regain legal title to such securities without any encumbrance.
- (2) The firm may only count securities that meet the requirements of BIPRU 12.7.9 R and BIPRU 12.7.9AR (1) from the point in time when the firm would regain legal title to the securities from the central bank, subsequent to any required notice period.
- (3) For the purposes of BIPRU 12.7.9AR (2) any required notice period is deemed to commence on the first business day that the central bank could receive notice from the firm.
BIPRU 12.7.10
See Notes
BIPRU 12.7.11
See Notes
- (1) For the purpose of BIPRU 12.7.9R (3), a firm must periodically realise a proportion of the assets in its liquid assets buffer through repo or outright sale to the market.
- (2) [deleted]
- (3) A firm must ensure that in carrying out such periodic realisation:
- (a) it does so without reference to the firm's day-to-day liquidity needs;
- (b) it realises in varying amounts the assets in its liquid assets buffer;
- (c) the cumulative effect of its periodic realisation over any twelve month period is that a significant proportion of the assets in its liquid assets buffer is realised; and
- (d) in repo to the market it enters into transactions of varying durations.
- (4) A firm must establish and maintain a written policy setting out its approach to periodic realisation of its assets.
- (5) A firm must also ensure that it periodically tests its operational ability to raise funds, through the use of central bank liquidity facilities to which it has access, using a proportion of those of its assets not in its liquid assets buffer.
BIPRU 12.7.12
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8
Cross-border and intra-group management of liquidity
- 01/12/2009
BIPRU 12.8.1
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.2
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.3
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8 provides guidance on two types of modification to the overall liquidity adequacy rule and to other rules in BIPRU 12 for which the appropriate regulator considers a firm may wish to apply, namely:
- (1) an intra-group liquidity modification; and
- (2) a whole-firm liquidity modification.
BIPRU 12.8.4
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.5
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.6
See Notes
Intra-group liquidity modification: general
BIPRU 12.8.7
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.8
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.9
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.10
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.11
See Notes
In each application for an intra-group liquidity modification, the appropriate regulator will consider the extent to which it is appropriate to modify the overall liquidity adequacy rule to allow reliance by an applicant firm on liquidity resources elsewhere in a firm's group. However, it is unlikely that the appropriate regulator would consider the conditions in section 138A of the Act to be met in circumstances in which the overall liquidity adequacy rule was modified to allow unlimited reliance on liquidity resources that are not the applicant firm's own. As a general principle, the appropriate regulator is likely to wish to ensure that, having regard to the results of an applicant firm's ILAA:
- (1) once modified, the overall liquidity adequacy rule still requires the firm to have adequate liquidity resources to enable it to wind down its business in an orderly and controlled manner in circumstances in which its business ceases to be viable; and
- (2) the amount of liquidity support permitted in the modification is a reasonable one having regard to the total liquidity resources of the group entity on which it is proposed that reliance should be placed.
BIPRU 12.8.12
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.13
See Notes
Consideration of an application for an intra-group liquidity modification
BIPRU 12.8.14
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.15
See Notes
In relation to the regime of liquidity regulation imposed by the authority that regulates for liquidity purposes an applicant firm's parent undertaking which is constituted under the law of a country or territory outside the United Kingdom, the appropriate regulator will ordinarily expect to be satisfied that:
- (1) the regime of liquidity regulation to which that undertaking is subject delivers outcomes as regards the regulation of that undertaking's liquidity risk that are broadly equivalent to those intended by BIPRU 12; and
- (2) there is clarity as to any legal constraints imposed by the authority which regulates that undertaking for liquidity purposes on the provision of liquidity from that undertaking to the applicant firm.
BIPRU 12.8.16
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.17
See Notes
In relation to an applicant firm wishing to rely on liquidity support from a parent undertaking constituted under the law of a country or territory outside the United Kingdom, the appropriate regulator will ordinarily expect to reach agreement with the authority that regulates that undertaking for liquidity purposes in a number of areas, including agreement that:
- (1) it will notify the appropriate regulator of any material or persistent breaches by that undertaking of that authoritys liquidity rules, or of risks that such breaches are imminent;
- (2) it is satisfied with the adequacy of the parent undertaking's arrangements for liquidity risk management;
- (3) it is satisfied as to the adequacy of the parent undertaking's liquidity resources including:
- (a) the size and quality of its liquid assets buffer; and
- (b) the size and quality of any liquidity resources that are held in the United Kingdom for the purpose of meeting the liabilities of an applicant firm as they fall due;
- (4) it does not object to any undertakings given by that parent undertaking in respect of an applicant firm to ensure that the firm has adequate liquidity resources; and
- (5) it will have due regard to the views of the appropriate regulator in its supervision of the liquidity position of that parent undertaking.
BIPRU 12.8.18
See Notes
In relation to an applicant firm wishing to rely on liquidity support from a parent undertaking constituted under the law of a country or territory outside the United Kingdom, the appropriate regulator will, before granting an intra-group liquidity modification, ordinarily expect to have reached agreement with that parent undertaking that:
- (1) it will make available liquidity resources at all times to that applicant firm if needed;
- (2) it will enter into an undertaking in a suitable form with an applicant firm committing it to provide liquidity support to that firm on the occurrence of certain defined events;
- (3) it will ensure that the applicant firm maintains liquidity resources of appropriate size and quality in the United Kingdom for the purposes of meeting the liquidity needs of that firm;
- (4) it will maintain arrangements, including having adequate liquidity resources, to ensure that it, the applicant firm and any other entities in its group to which it provides liquidity support are able to wind down their businesses in an orderly and controlled manner in circumstances where its, or their, businesses cease to be viable;
- (5) it will make available to the appropriate regulator information in an appropriate format on group liquidity; and
- (6) it will participate in the appropriate regulator's thematic supervisory work in relation to liquidity when requested to do so by the appropriate regulator.
BIPRU 12.8.19
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.20
See Notes
Ongoing requirements
BIPRU 12.8.21
See Notes
The appropriate regulator also anticipates that an intra-group liquidity modification would be made subject to a number of ongoing conditions and requirements. These are likely to include:
- (1) the appropriate regulator receiving annual confirmation from the authority that regulates an applicant firm's parent undertaking for liquidity purposes that it remains satisfied with the arrangements in respect of that undertaking for liquidity supervision and their operation; and
- (2) an annual meeting with the same authority to discuss liquidity supervision of that undertaking.
Whole-firm liquidity modification: general
BIPRU 12.8.22
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.23
See Notes
BIPRU 12.8.24
See Notes
Accordingly, a whole-firm liquidity modification envisages:
- (1) a modification to the overall liquidity adequacy rule so as to permit reliance by the firm, in relation to its UK branch, on liquidity resources wherever held in the firm for the purposes of meeting that rule; and
- (2) a waiver of the remainder of the substantive rules in BIPRU 12, with the effect that the UK branch of the applicant firm becomes subject for the purpose of day-to-day liquidity supervision to the liquidity regime of the Home State regulator or third country competent authority in question.
BIPRU 12.8.25
See Notes
Consideration of an application for a whole-firm liquidity modification
BIPRU 12.8.26
See Notes
In relation to the Home State regulator's or third country competent authority's regime of liquidity regulation, the appropriate regulator will, before granting a whole-firm liquidity modification, ordinarily expect to be satisfied that:
- (1) the regime in question delivers outcomes as regards the regulation of the applicant firm's liquidity risk that are broadly equivalent to those intended by this chapter; and
- (2) there is clarity as to any legal constraints imposed by the Home State regulator or third country competent authority on the provision of liquidity by a firm to its UK branch, as well as the potential for such restrictions to be imposed in the future.
BIPRU 12.8.27
See Notes
In relation to the applicant firm in question, the appropriate regulator will, before granting a whole-firm liquidity modification, ordinarily expect to have reached agreement with the Home State regulator or third country competent authority in a number of areas, including agreement that:
- (1) it will notify the appropriate regulator promptly of any material or persistent breaches by that firm of its liquidity rules, or of risks that such breaches are imminent;
- (2) it is satisfied with the adequacy of the arrangements in place for firm-wide liquidity risk management;
- (3) it is satisfied as to the adequacy of that firm's liquidity resources including the size and quality of its liquid assets buffer;
- (4) it does not object to any undertakings given by that firm in respect of its UK branch to ensure that the branch has adequate liquidity resources; and
- (5) it will have due regard to the views of the appropriate regulator in its supervision of that firm's liquidity position.
BIPRU 12.8.28
See Notes
In relation to the applicant firm in question, the appropriate regulator will, before granting a whole-firm liquidity modification, ordinarily expect to have reached agreement with that firm in a number of areas, including agreement that:
- (1) it will make available liquidity resources at all times to its UK branch if needed;
- (2) it will make available to the appropriate regulator information in an appropriate format on firm-wide liquidity;
- (3) it will notify the appropriate regulator at the same time as it notifies the Home State regulator or third country competent authority of any issues relevant to the liquidity position of its UK branch or compliance with the rules to which it is subject in respect of its liquidity (including with the terms of its whole-firm liquidity modification);
- (4) its UK branch will continue to be fully integrated with the rest of the firm for liquidity risk management purposes; and
- (5) it will participate in the appropriate regulator's thematic supervisory work in relation to liquidity when requested to do so by the appropriate regulator.
Ongoing requirements
BIPRU 12.8.29
See Notes
The appropriate regulator also anticipates that a whole-firm liquidity modification would be made subject to a number of ongoing conditions and requirements. These are likely to include:
- (1) the appropriate regulator receiving annual confirmation from the Home State regulator or third country competent authority that it remains satisfied with the arrangements in respect of that firm for liquidity supervision and their operation;
- (2) an annual meeting with the Home State regulator or third country competent authority to discuss liquidity supervision of that firm;
- (3) the appropriate regulator receiving annual confirmation from the firm, approved by its governing body, that it remains in full compliance with the terms of its whole-firm liquidity modification; and
- (4) as at the first anniversary of the grant of the whole-firm liquidity modification and on each anniversary thereafter, the appropriate regulator receiving from the firm:
- (a) an appropriate account of the activities conducted by the UK branch over the previous year; and
- (b) a copy of the firm's latest business plan where this differs from that previously sent to the appropriate regulator after grant of its whole-firm liquidity modification.
BIPRU 12.8.30
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9
Individual liquidity guidance and regulatory intervention points
- 01/12/2009
Appropriate regulator assessment process
BIPRU 12.9.1
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.2
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.3
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.4
See Notes
As part of the SLRP, the appropriate regulator will give a standard ILAS BIPRU firm individual liquidity guidance advising it of the amount and quality of liquidity resources which the appropriate regulator considers are appropriate, having regard to the liquidity risk profile of that firm. In giving individual liquidity guidance, the appropriate regulator will also advise the firm of what it considers to be a prudent funding profile for the firm. In giving the firm individual liquidity guidance as to its funding profile, the appropriate regulator will consider the extent to which the firm's liabilities are adequately matched by assets of appropriate maturities. In both cases, the appropriate regulator will have regard to the adequacy of a firm's systems and controls in relation to liquidity risk when judged against the standard described in the rules and guidance in BIPRU 12.3 and BIPRU 12.4. Individual liquidity guidance will therefore have two components:
BIPRU 12.9.5
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.6
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.7
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.8
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.9
See Notes
Additional guidance for branches
BIPRU 12.9.10
See Notes
Regulatory intervention points for ILAS BIPRU firms
BIPRU 12.9.11
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.12
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.12A
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.13
See Notes
As soon as a firm becomes aware of the occurrence or expected occurrence of the events identified in BIPRU 12.9.14 R, it must immediately provide to the appropriate regulator:
- (1) notification in writing of the event;
- (2) an adequately reasoned explanation for the event; and
- (3) an indication of the management actions the firm has taken to date to address the event, including actions from its contingency funding plan.
BIPRU 12.9.14
See Notes
For the purpose of BIPRU 12.9.13 R, the events in question are:
- (1) in the case of a simplified ILAS BIPRU firm only, breach of the simplified buffer requirement unless this has been superseded by individual liquidity guidance that it has accepted;
- (2) in the case of a standard ILAS BIPRU firm or a simplified ILAS BIPRU firm, being a firm which in either case has accepted individual liquidity guidance given to it by the appropriate regulator:
BIPRU 12.9.15
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.16
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.17
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.18
See Notes
For the purposes of BIPRU 12.9.17 R, a firm's liquidity remediation plan must:
- (1) be communicated in writing;
- (2) detail the firm's forward estimates of the evolution of the size of the firm's liquid assets buffer and of its funding profile;
- (3) in relation to any of the events identified in BIPRU 12.9.14 R that has occurred, or is expected to occur, detail the actions that the firm intends to take to remedy the event, or avoid the expected event, as the case may be, including information about:
- (a) the amount of funding that it is intended to raise;
- (b) the intended funding providers; and
- (c) the maturity profile of the intended funding;
- (4) identify clear timescales for achieving each of the actions that it details in accordance with BIPRU 12.9.18R (3); and
- (5) include an adequately reasoned assessment of the likelihood of the timely achievement of the actions that it details in accordance with BIPRU 12.9.18R (3).
BIPRU 12.9.19
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.20
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.21
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.22
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.23
See Notes
Monitoring requirement
BIPRU 12.9.24
See Notes
Mode of notification
BIPRU 12.9.25
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.26
See Notes
BIPRU 12.9.27
See Notes
BIPRU 12 Annex 1
Mapping of credit assessments of ECAIs to credit quality steps
- 01/01/2014
See Notes
Credit Quality Step | Fitch's assessment | Moody's assessments | S&P's assessments | DBRS' assessments |
1 | AAA to AA- | Aaa to Aa3 | AAA to AA- | AAA to AAL |
2 | A+ to A- | A1 to A3 | A+ to A- | AH to AL |
3 | BBB+ to BBB- | Baa1 to Baa3 | BBB+ to BBB- | BBBH to BBBL |
4 | BB+ to BB- | Ba1 to Ba3 | BB+ to BB- | BBH to BBL |
5 | B+ to B- | B1 to B3 | B+ to B- | BH to BL |
6 | CCC+ and below | Caa1 and below | CCC+ and below | CCCH and below |
- 01/01/2014
Transitional Provisions and Schedules
BIPRU TP 2
Capital floors for a firm using the IRB or AMA approaches
Application | |||
2.1 | R | Subject to BIPRU TP 2.2R, this section applies to a BIPRU firm that applies the IRB approach or the advanced measurement approach. | |
2.2 | R | BIPRU TP 2.30R to BIPRU TP 2.34G apply to any firm to which BIPRU 8 (Group risk - consolidation) applies and which applies the IRB approach or the advanced measurement approach on a consolidated basis. | |
Purpose | |||
2.3 | G | This section in part implements Articles 152(1) - (7) of the Banking Consolidation Directive and Article 43 of the Capital Adequacy Directive. | |
2.4 | G | The purpose of this section is to limit the amount of capital reduction arising from the implementation of the Banking Consolidation Directive and the Capital Adequacy Directive compared with the requirements arising from the previous versions of those Directives. As such it is effectively a comparison of the capital resource requirements arising from BIPRU with those arising from the appropriate IPRU sourcebook that would have applied as at 31 December 2006. However the effect of changes to the market risk requirements is removed by requiring BIPRU 7 (Market risk) to be used for both sides of the comparison. | |
How to apply the capital floors | |||
2.5 | G | This section does not require a firm to continue to have capital resources equal to a fixed percentage of the capital requirement that applied to it as at 31 December 2006. Instead a firm should apply the requirements in this section to its business as it changes over time. So for example if a firm is calculating its capital requirements as at 31 December 2008 it will have two calculations. The first is carried out under BIPRU and GENPRU. The second is carried out under IPRU and this section. Both sets of requirements are applied to the firm's figures as at 31 December 2008. | |
2.6 | G | The Directive provisions on which this section is based are written as a floor on a firm's capital resources requirement. This section however is written as a second capital resources requirement that sits beside the general capital resources requirements of BIPRU and GENPRU. The reason for this is that a firm should meet the general capital resources requirements of BIPRU and GENPRU using capital resources calculated under GENPRU 2.2 (Capital resources). On the other hand a firm should meet the capital resources requirements of this section (which are based on IPRU) using the relevant IPRU definition. In practice the two sets of definitions of capital resources are similar apart from the provisions about expected loss. Therefore as shown by the example in BIPRU TP 2.12G and BIPRU TP 2.13G, in practice a firm is subject to a single capital resources requirement. | |
2.7 | G | BIPRU TP 9 explains how the general principle in this section is applied to a personal investment firm. | |
Capital floors: solo | |||
2.8 | R | A firm calculating risk weighted exposure amounts in accordance with the IRB approach must during the following twelve-month periods after 31 December 2006 provide capital resources that equal or exceed the following amounts: | |
(1) | for the first twelve-month period, 95%; | ||
(2) | for the second twelve-month period, 90%; and | ||
(3) | for the third and each subsequent twelve-month period, 80%; | ||
of the solo capital resources requirement that applies to the firm under whichever part of IPRU applies under BIPRU TP 1.4R. | |||
2.9 | R | A firm using the advanced measurement approach must, during each of the second, third and subsequent twelve-month periods after 31 December 2006, provide capital resources which are at all times more than or equal to the amounts indicated in BIPRU TP 2.8R(2) and BIPRU TP 2.8R(3). | |
Capital resources: solo | |||
2.10 | R | A firm must calculate its capital resources in accordance with whichever part of IPRU applies under BIPRU TP 1.4R. | |
2.11 | R | Compliance with the requirements of this section must be on the basis of amounts of capital resources fully adjusted to reflect differences in the calculation of capital resources under IPRU and the calculation of capital resources under GENPRU and BIPRU deriving from the separate treatments of expected loss and unexpected loss under the IRB approach. | |
Waiver from IPRU capital resources requirement | |||
2.11A | G | Article 152(5d) and (5e) of the Banking Consolidation Directive allows the appropriate regulator to waive the capital floor calculation based on the IPRU capital resources requirement in BIPRU TP 2.8R(3), or BIPRU TP 2.8R(3) as applied in BIPRU TP 2.9R, on a case-by-case basis only if a firm started to use the IRB approach or the advanced measurement approach on or after 1 January 2010. The appropriate regulator will consider an application for such a waiver in the light of the criteria in section 138A of the Act (Modification or waiver of rules). | |
2.11B | R | If a firm has a waiver referred to in BIPRU TP 2.11AG, it must provide capital resources that equal or exceed 80% of the capital resources requirement that the firm would be required to provide under the relevant sections of BIPRU applicable to it immediately before it started to use the IRB approach or the advanced measurement approach as those sections were in force on 31 December 2010. | |
Explanation of the calculation | |||
2.12 | G | The following provides an illustrative example of the application of this section to a bank in a period in which BIPRU TP 2.8R(1) applies (i.e. the 95% requirement). Say that under IPRU(BANK) the firm's capital resources requirement would be £8.00mn and this would be met in part by general/collective provisions of £0.5mn. This establishes the capital resources requirement under this section at 95% times (£8.0mn less £0.5mn), which equals £7.125mn. | |
2.13 | G | Say that in the absence of this section, the Pillar 1 capital resources requirement of the firm in BIPRU TP 2.12G would be £6.4m, and the sum of value adjustments and provisions are £0.25mn less than expected losses. For the purposes of the expected loss calculation, if the result is negative (i.e. value adjustments and provisions are less than expected losses) that amount is deducted from capital resources (which is equivalent to an increase in the capital resources requirement). If the result is positive it is added to capital resources (which is equivalent to a decrease in the capital resources requirement). In this example the result is negative. As the sum of these two amounts (£6.65mn) is still less than the IPRU capital resources requirement of £7.125mn, the effect of this section is that the firm is subject to the (higher) IPRU requirement. If the sum of the BIPRU requirements had been greater than £7.125mn, then the firm would not have been subject to the capital resources requirement in this section. | |
Adjustments to the calculation of capital resources | |||
2.14 | R | A firm may treat any capital instrument that complies with the requirements of GENPRU 2.2 (Capital resources) as complying with the corresponding requirements of IPRU. | |
2.15 | G | An example of BIPRU TP 2.14R is that a firm may treat subordinated debt with a term of five years or over that qualifies as lower tier two capital for the purposes of GENPRU as complying with the corresponding provisions for five year subordinated debt under IPRU. | |
Market risk | |||
2.16 | R | A firm must substitute the requirements in BIPRU for the calculation of the market risk capital requirement (excluding those provisions to the extent that they would involve using the IRB approach) for the corresponding provisions of IPRU. | |
2.17 | G | BIPRU TP 4 to BIPRU TP 9 (Pre CRD capital requirements applying on a solo basis during 2007) explain which parts of IPRU correspond to the market risk capital requirement. | |
CAD 1 model and VaR model | |||
2.18 | R | If a firm has a CAD 1 permission or a VaR model permission it must also use it for the purposes of the capital floor calculations in this section. | |
2.19 | G | In applying BIPRU TP 2.18R, a firm should not adjust the CAD 1 permission approach or VaR model approach (including the scope of the CAD 1 permission or VaR model permission) so that it is consistent with Directive 93/6 (the Capital Adequacy Directive) as it stood on 31 December 2006. | |
Individual capital guidance | |||
2.20 | R | The IPRU capital resources requirement does not include any individual capital ratio notified to a bank under Chapter CO of IPRU(BANK) or any similar notification by the appropriate regulator to any other firm. | |
2.21 | G | Any further capital resource requirements that a firm is required to meet under GENPRU 1.2 (Adequacy of financial resources) (i.e. Pillar 2) should not be taken into account. | |
How to apply IPRU | |||
2.22 | R | If the part of IPRU that applies to a firm applies different calculations to different types of firm the firm must use the calculations that it would have to use under BIPRU TP 3 (Pre CRD capital requirements applying on a solo basis during 2007). | |
2.23 | R | If the part of IPRU that applies to a firm gives the firm a choice between methods of calculating capital resources or capital resources requirements it must exercise that choice consistently with the corresponding choices it makes in calculating capital resources or capital resources requirement under GENPRU and BIPRU. | |
2.24 | G | BIPRU TP 4 to BIPRU TP 9 (Pre CRD capital requirements applying on a solo basis during 2007) explain how concepts in IPRU and GENPRU map onto the ones in IPRU. This will enable a firm to decide which calculations it should use for the purposes of BIPRU TP 2.22R and BIPRU TP 2.23R. | |
2.25 | G | An example of the effect of BIPRU TP 2.22R and BIPRU TP 2.23R is that a securities and futures firm that calculates its capital resources under GENPRU 2 Annex 4 R (Capital resources table for a BIPRU investment firm deducting material holdings) should calculate its capital resources under IPRU using table 10-62(2)A of chapter 10 of IPRU(INV). | |
2.26 | R | For the purpose of calculating the part of the IPRU capital resources requirement that corresponds to the concentration risk capital component a firm may identify the trading book exposures on which that requirement is based using BIPRU 10 (Large exposures requirements) except to the extent that BIPRU 10 involves the IRB approach. | |
2.27 | G | The concentration risk capital component is the capital requirement for a firm that chooses to have trading book exposures that exceed the large exposure limits for the non-trading book. In most cases IPRU has a similar capital requirement. The purpose of BIPRU TP 2.26R is to allow a firm to calculate the amount of the excess trading book exposures for which it calculates the additional capital charge using BIPRU 10 (Large exposures requirements) in order to avoid having to apply the IPRU large exposure requirements for this purpose only. | |
2.28 | R | The calculations under this section do not take into account the base capital resources requirement or the part of the IPRU solo capital resources requirement that corresponds to the base capital resources requirement. | |
Solo consolidation | |||
2.29 | R | If a firm has a solo consolidation waiver it also applies for the purpose of this section in place of any corresponding provision of IPRU. | |
Capital floors: consolidation | |||
2.30 | R | If a firm calculates risk weighted exposure amounts on a consolidated basis in accordance with the IRB approach or uses the advanced measurement approach on a consolidated basis, BIPRU TP 2.8R to BIPRU TP 2.27G apply on a consolidated basis in accordance with BIPRU TP 2.30R to BIPRU TP 2.31R. | |
2.31 | R | A firm must calculate the consolidation requirements under BIPRU TP 2.30R for the group in question (the group in question is specified in BIPRU TP 2.32R) in accordance with the following: | |
(1) | if the group is a banking group as defined in BIPRU TP 1.7R (Classification of groups for certain consolidation rules), the consolidation provisions of IPRU(BANK) apply; | ||
(2) | if the group is a building society group as defined in BIPRU TP 1.7R, the consolidation provisions of IPRU(BSOC) apply; and | ||
(3) | if the group is an investment firm group as defined in BIPRU TP 1.7R, chapter 14 of IPRU(INV) applies. | ||
2.32 | R | The scope of the consolidation under BIPRU TP 2.30R and any exemption from consolidation is determined in accordance with BIPRU 8 (Group risk - consolidation) rather than IPRU. In particular, the following adjustments apply: | |
(1) | if a firm is a member of a UK consolidation group and applies the IRB approach or the AMA with respect to that UK consolidation group, BIPRU TP 2.30R applies with respect to that UK consolidation group; and | ||
(2) | if a firm is a member of a non-EEA sub-group and applies the IRB approach or the AMA with respect to that non-EEA sub-group, BIPRU TP 2.30R applies with respect to that non-EEA sub-group. | ||
2.33 | G | If for example the consolidation rules that apply for the purposes of this section are those in chapter 14 of IPRU(INV) (Consolidated supervision of investment firms) then IPRU(INV) 14.1 (Application) and 14.2 (Scope of consolidation) do not apply. BIPRU 8.2 (Scope and basic consolidation requirements for UK consolidation groups), BIPRU 8.3 (Scope and basic consolidation requirements for non-EEA sub-groups), BIPRU 8.4 (CAD Article 22 groups and investment firm consolidation waiver) and BIPRU 8.5 (Basis of consolidation) apply instead. | |
Capital floors: waiver from consolidation | |||
2.34 | G | If a firm has an investment firm consolidation waiver and it is applying the IRB approach or the AMA, the waiver will explain how the investment firm consolidation waiver applies for the purpose of this section. |
- 01/04/2013
- Past version of BIPRU TP 2 before 01/04/2013
BIPRU TP 21
Close substitutes for commodities
Application | ||
21.1 | R | This section applies to a BIPRU firm that on 31 December 2006 was applying the approach referred to in the first column of the table in BIPRU TP 21.3R with respect to particular grades or brands of the same commodity-class. |
Commodities: close substitutes | ||
21.2 | R | A notice given under the IPRU provision in the second column of the table in BIPRU TP 21.3R is treated as having been given under BIPRU 7.4.23 R (Notice to the appropriate regulator about treatment of different grades or brands of the same commodity) for the purposes of BIPRU 7.4.22 R (Treatment of different grades or brands of the same commodity) with respect to the commodity grades or brands referred to in BIPRU TP 21.1R. |
21.3 | R | Table: Commodity treatments under IPRU This table belongs to BIPRU TP 21.2R |
IPRU provisions setting out commodity approach | IPRU provisions under which notice given |
Paragraph 22(2) of appendix 6 of chapter 10 of IPRU(INV) | Paragraph 23 of appendix 6 of chapter 10 of IPRU(INV) |
Paragraph 22(2) of chapter CM of IPRU(BANK) | Paragraph 23 of chapter CM of IPRU(BANK) |
Explanation | ||
21.3 | G | BIPRU 7.4.22 R (1)(b) says that a firm should treat positions in different grades or brands of the same commodity-class as different commodities unless they are close substitutes and have price movements which have exhibited a stable correlation coefficient of at least 0.9 over the last 12 months. BIPRU 7.4.23 R says that a firm should notify the appropriate regulator in writing at least 20 business days prior to the date the firm starts relying on this treatment. The purpose of this section is to allow a notice given under the corresponding provisions of chapter 10 of IPRU(INV) or IPRU(BANK) to continue to have effect without the firm having to serve a new notice under BIPRU 7.4.23 R. |
BIPRU Sch 3
Fees and other requirement payments
- 01/01/2007
See Notes
BIPRU Sch 6
Rules than can be waived
- 01/01/2007
See Notes
The rules in BIPRU may be waived by the appropriate regulator under section 138A of the Act (Modification or waiver of rules). However, if the rules incorporate requirements laid down in European directives, it will not be possible for the appropriate regulator to grant a waiver that would be incompatible with the United Kingdom's responsibilities under those directives. It therefore follows that if a rule in BIPRU contains provisions which derive partly from a directive, and partly not, the appropriate regulator will be able to consider a waiver of the latter requirements only, unless the directive provisions are optional rather than mandatory. |