1
Application and Definitions
1.1
Unless otherwise stated, this Part applies to every firm that is a UK bank or a building society that, on the firm’s last accounting reference date, had retail deposits equal to or greater than £50 billion either on:
- (1) an individual basis;
- (2) if the firm is a parent institution in a Member State, on the basis of its consolidated situation; or
- (3) if the firm is controlled by a parent financial holding company in a Member State or by a parent mixed financial holding company in a Member State and the PRA is responsible for supervision of that holding company on a consolidated basis under Article 111 of the CRD, on the basis of the consolidated situation of that holding company.
- 01/01/2016
1.2
In this Part, the following definitions shall apply:
means the plan described in Chapter 6.
countercyclical capital buffer rate
means the countercyclical buffer rate, as defined in Capital Buffers 1.2.
countercyclical leverage ratio buffer
means the amount of common equity tier 1 capital a firm must calculate in accordance with 4.1 and 4.2.
has the meaning given in 30, Part 1, Annex V (Reporting on financial information) for the purposes of the European Banking Authority’s Implementing Technical Standards amending the Commission’s Implementing Regulation (EU) No 680/2014 on supervisory reporting under Regulation (EU) No 575/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council.
means the Financial Policy Committee of the Bank of England.
means a firm’s tier 1 capital divided by its total exposure measure, with this ratio expressed as a percentage.
means deposits from “households” as defined in 35(f), Part 1, Annex V (Reporting on financial information) for the purposes of the European Banking Authority’s Implementing Technical Standards amending the Commission’s Implementing Regulation (EU) No 680/2014 on supervisory reporting under Regulation (EU) No 575/2013 of the European Parliament and of the Council.
has the meaning given by Article 25 of the CRR except that:
(1) an additional tier 1 capital instrument can only be counted as tier 1 capital if it either:
(a) converts into common equity tier 1 capital; or
(b) writes down,
when the common equity tier 1 capital ratio of the firm falls below a level equal to either:
(a) 7%; or
(b) a level higher than 7%,
as specified in the provisions governing the instrument; and
(2) instruments that qualify for grandfathering under Article 483 of the CRR can be counted as tier 1 capital.
has the meaning given by Article 429(4) of the CRR, as amended by the Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2015/62.
- 01/01/2016