Measuring and Managing
Operational Risk Under
Basel II
Constantinos Stephanou
The World Bank
Risk Management Workshop Colombia
February 17, 2004
Outline of Presentation
Introduction to Operational Risk (OR)
The Basel II OR framework
Measuring OR under the AMA
Latest QIS OR Results
OR Management
Evaluation, Implications and
Conclusions
What is OR?
Applies to all firms (financial and nonfinancial)
Used to be a catch-all phrase for nonfinancial risks
Current Basel II definition is the risk of
loss resulting from inadequate or failed
internal processes, people and
systems or from external events
Includes both internal and external event
risk
Legal risk is also included, but strategic,
reputational and systemic risks are not
Examples of OR Loss Events
Types of OR*
Examples
Unauthorized transaction resulting in monetary
loss
Embezzlement of funds
Branch robbery
Hacking damage (systems security)
Internal Fraud
External Fraud
Employment
Employee discrimination issues
Practices &
Workplace Safety Inadequate employee health or safety rules
Clients, Products Money laundering
& Business
Lender liability from disclosure violations or
Practices
aggressive sales
Natural disasters, e.g. earthquakes
Damage to
Physical Assets Terrorist activities
Business
Disruption and Utility outage (e.g. blackout)
System Failures
Execution,
Data
error
* Based on Basel Committees
ORentry
loss event
classification see Appendix for details.
Delivery &
4
Incomplete or missing legal documents
Process
Major OR Characteristics
Partly endogenous
Unwanted by-product of corporate activity
Positively related to complexity of
operations
Highly idiosyncratic
OR events tend to be less correlated to
each other and to other risk types
Less directly linked to business cycles
In principle (partially) controllable ex
ante
Trade-off is mostly risk vs. cost of
avoidance, not risk vs. return
Key Drivers of Interest in OR
Recent
Experience
Regulatory
Pressure
Market
Developments
Firm-wide
Risk Management
High-profile cases and related
negative publicity
Examples include Allfirst, Barings,
Enron etc.
Basel IIs explicit capital
requirements for OR
Additional complexity brought about
by automation, outsourcing, large
volume service provision,
deregulation, M&A, risk transfer etc.
6
Size Compared to Other
Risks
OR is sizeable compared to other risk
types
Its exclusion can make certain businesses
Entity appear
Methodology
Dat
OR Findings
artificially attractive,
e.g.
asset
e
management and trading
RMG of
Basel
Committee
Quantitative Impact
Survey (QIS2-Tranche 1)
of 41 banks
200
1
15% (on average) of economic
capital
MOW
Benchmarking study of
10 banks
200
1
11% (on average) of
economic capital
MOW
Analysis of OpRisk
Analytics loss database
200
2
1.05% of risk-weighted assets,
corresponding to 13% of the
BIS minimum capital
requirement
RMA /
FMCG
Survey of 12 banks
200
2
11%-17% of economic capital
* Capital and Risk: New Evidence on Implications of Large Operational Losses by de
Fontnouvelle, DeJesus-Rueff,
and Rosengren
Reserve Bank
of Boston, with
Boston
Analysis of Jordan
OpRisk
200(Federal
Estimates
consistent
SeptemberAnalytics
2003).
Fed*
and OpVantage
3
the amount of OR capital held
OR Measurement Pre-Basel
II
OR capital measurement was topdown
Approaches
Description
% of income/assets/costs, compared
to peers
% of non-interest income, compared
Indicator /
Benchmarking to non-financial analogs
% of total capital calculated to cover
financial risks (credit, market etc.)
Deviation in earnings (neutralized
Residual
Earnings
for impact of financial volatility) at
Volatility
specified confidence interval
and subject to various problems
Arbitrariness / inconsistency
Comparability
Basel II Framework for OR
Scope of application
Pillar I (minimum capital requirements)
Definition
Business line mapping
Classification of loss event types
Measurement approaches (3)
Qualifying criteria
Pillar II (supervisory review)
Pillar III (market disclosure/discipline)
Quantitative Impact Study (QIS) results
9
Scope of Application for OR
Primarily intended for internationally
active banks and banks with significant OR
exposures
Applied, on a fully consolidated basis, at
holding company and lower levels within a
banking group
Insurance activities are excluded
Supervisory approval required for banks to
revert to simpler approach once approved
for more advanced one
10
Pillar I Approach 1
Basic Indicator
Corresponds to the Standardized Approach for
credit risk
Capital charge is 15% (alpha) of banks
average annual gross income over previous 3
years
Gross income should exclude provisions, insurance
income, realized profits/losses from sale of securities
in banking book, and extraordinary or irregular
items
No specific criteria/requirements for its use
Banks are encouraged to comply with Basel
Committees guidance on Sound Practices for the
Management and Supervision of Operational Risk
11
(February 2003)
Pillar I Approach 2
Standardized / Alternative Standardized
Banks activities divided (mapped) into 8
business lines
Capital charge is sum of specified % (beta) of
each business lines average annual gross
income over previous 3 years*
Beta varies by business line (12%-18% range)
General criteria required to qualify for its use
Active involvement of Board and senior management
in OR management framework
Existence of OR management function, reporting and
systems
toSystematic
* Subject
national supervisory
discretion, the
Standardized
Approach
(ASA) canby
tracking
of Alternative
OR data
(including
losses)
be chosen. It uses volume of loans and advances (instead of gross income) as the exposure
12
line
indicator business
for the retail and
commercial banking business lines.
Business Line Mapping
LEVEL 1
BETA
FACTORS
LEVEL 2
ACTIVITY GROUPS
Corporate Finance
Corporate
Finance
18%
Trading and
Sales
18%
Retail
Banking
12%
Commercial
Banking
Payment &
Settlement
Agency
Services
15%
18%
15%
Asset
Management
12%
Retail
Brokerage
12%
Mergers and Acquisitions, Underwriting, Privatizations, Securitization, Research,
Municipal /
Government Finance Debt (Government, High Yield), Equity, Syndications, IPO, Secondary Private
Placements
Merchant Banking
Advisory Services
Sales
Fixed Income, Equity, Foreign Exchanges, Commodities, Credit, Funding, Own
Market Making
Position Securities, Lending and Repos, Brokerage, Debt, Prime Brokerage
Proprietary Positions
Treasury
Retail Banking
Retail Lending and Deposits, Banking Services, Trust and Estates
Private Banking
Card Services
Project Finance, Real Estate, Export Finance, Trade Finance, Factoring, Leasing,
Commercial Banking
Lends, Guarantees, Bills of Exchange
External Clients
Payments and Collections, Funds Transfer, Clearing and Settlement
Custody
Escrow, Depository Receipts, Securities Lending (Customers), Corporate Actions
Corporate Agency
Corporate Trust
Discretionary Fund
Management
Non-Discretionary
Fund Management
Issuer and Paying Agents
Pooled, Segregated, Retail, Institutional, Closed, Open, Private Equity
Retail Brokerage
Execution and Full Service
Pooled, Segregated, Retail, Institutional, Closed, Open
13
Pillar I Approach 3
Advanced Measurement Approaches
(AMA)
Corresponds to the IRB Approach for credit risk
OR capital charge to be derived from banks
own methods
Its use (partial or full) is subject to supervisory
approval
The extent of partial use is determined by bank
criteria and is conditional on submission of a plan to
roll out AMA fully over time
A hybrid allocation mechanism approach is allowed
for the calculation of OR capital for certain
internationally active banking subsidiaries*
Broadly similar general criteria and qualitative
standards as for Standardized Approach, to be14
* Principles for the home-host recognition of AMA operational risk capital, Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision (January 2004).
Pillar I Approach 3 (cont.)
Additional quantitative standards (cont.)
Regulatory capital requirement for OR is the sum of
EL and UL*
Sound, internally determined OR loss correlations
can be used
Internal and relevant external loss data, scenario
analysis, and business environment and internal
control factors should be used
Minimum 5-year observation period for internal loss
data**
Criteria for internal loss event capture (e.g.
threshold levels, mapping by business line and event
type***, recoveries, attribution etc.)
* Unless the bank can demonstrate that it is adequately capturing EL in its internal business
Credit
losses
OR
to be recorded
butBasel
excluded
practices
(section 629b,
Pillarfrom
One, Third
Consultative
Paper on The New
Capital
Accord,from
Basel Committee
on Banking Supervision, April 2003).
calculations
** When the bank first moves to the AMA, a three-year historical data window is acceptable
15
(section 632, ibid).
Risk mitigation
*** See Appendix for Basel IIs proposed loss event type classification.
Alternative AMA Approaches
Given embryonic state of OR
measurement, Basel II lets a thousand
flowers bloom in the AMA
(At least) three types of approaches
identified
Internal Measurement Approaches (IMA)
- PD/EAD/LGD-type framework, where capital
charge (UL) is a fixed function gamma
(calculated by bank itself) of EL
Loss Distribution Approaches (LDA)
- Capital from modeling loss frequency and severity
distributions
Scorecard approaches
- Base level top-down OR capital is allocated to
16
AMA Toolkit
Internal loss event data
External loss data
Scalars / Exposure Indicators
Scenario analyses
Key Risk/Performance Indicators
(KRIs/KPIs)
Quantitative measures serving as early
warning indicators
Control and Risk Self Assessments
(CRSAs)
Qualitative assessments of inherent risks
and controls
17
AMA Some Practical Issues
Topic
Issues
Selecting minimum materiality threshold
Determining frequency and severity of loss
events
Mapping to supervisory event types/business
Internal lines
loss event Identifying and leveraging existing historical
loss databases
data
collection Establishing an automated process of
collection, validation, attribution and reporting
that aligns with incentives
Setting the boundary between OR and other
risk types
Determining which KRIs and CRSA scores
Scorecard will be included
developm
Adjusting scores to make them objective and
ent
18
CAUSE
Example: Internal Loss
Capture
Internal (people, processes or systems) or
external event
LOSS EVENT
CONSEQUENC
E
DISCOVERY
CORRECTION
COST
Classification (e.g. Basels Level 1, 2 and 3 event
type categories)
Description of loss (e.g. cash shortage)
Detection of loss event (e.g. reconciliation)
Description of corrective process (e.g. account
edits)
ATTRIBUTION
Monetary loss type* (e.g. write-down, restitution
etc.)
DISCLOSURE
19
* See Appendix for monetary loss type classification.
Example: Loss
Modeling
Populating the loss distribution for a
specific business line and event type
EVENT TYPES
Low
Severity
A
High
e.g. routine
Frequency processing error
Low
Frequency
High
Severity
LOSS DISTRIBUTION
Frequency EL
UL (99.9%
confidence
interval)
N/A
OR Capital
e.g. branch
robbery
e.g. 9/11
Severity
Mostly internal
loss data
(types A and B)
Mostly external
loss data and
scenarios (type
C)
20
Pillars II and III
Pillar II
The four key principles mentioned also
apply for OR
2003 paper on Sound Practices for the
Management and Supervision of OR to
form basis for Pillar 2 evaluation
Pillar III
Qualitative disclosures
- OR capital approach, including AMA description
(if applicable)
- Various OR management objectives and policies
Quantitative disclosures
- OR capital charge at the top consolidated level of21
banking group
QIS OR Results
QIS 3* OR results are broadly consistent with the
Committees objectives
New OR capital requirement outweighs reduced credit
risk capital requirements, so overall change is a small
increase**
- OR constitutes 8%-15% of existing (Basel I) capital
requirements, depending on selected group of countries
- Much greater variation of OR results within each group
- Sizable increase in capital requirements for specialized
banks
- Optional Alternative Standardized approach preferable for
banks with high margins (e.g. retail lenders)
Loss Data Collection Exercise results indicate
data availability issues for many business
* 188 banks from G10 countries and 177 banks from 30 other countries participated in this exercise. See
Quantitative
Impact Study
3 Overview
of Global Results (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision,
line/event
type
combinations
May 2003).
See next page
22
** In order to avoid sample selection problems (e.g. the banks completing the IRB approaches is only a
subset of those completing the Standardized approach), only the results from the Standardized
% of
total
gross
loss
amount
s
QIS OR Results (cont.)*
LOSS
EVENT
TYPE
BUSINESS
LINE
Intern
al
Fraud
Extern
al
Fraud
% of
total
# of
loss
event
s
Employ Clients, Dama Busine Execut Total
m.
Produc
ge to
ss
.,
Practice
ts and Physic Disrupt Delive
s and
Busine
al
. and
ry and
Workpla
ss
Assets System Proces
ce0.15% Service
s0.45% 0.89%
0.15%
0.04%
0.03% Failure
0.02%
0.04%
Safety 2.03%
s
s
Mgmt 3.51%
0.03%
0.10%
0.64%
0.63%
0.01%
0.06%
0.20%
0.21%
0.23%
0.07%
0.29%
9.74% 10.9%
0.10%
0.76%
0.52%
0.83%
2.48%
1.13%
0.23%
8.96%
14.9%
2.68%
1.10%
0.34%
11.2% 61.1%
4.36%
4.50%
36.2%
4.36%
0.34%
5.45%
3.26%
1.12%
29.4%
Trading and Sales 4.26%
10.1%
0.18%
0.17%
0.11%
0.10%
2.14% 7.22%
3.81%
0.65%
Retail Banking 0.27%
2.01%
0.23%
4.17%
0.26%
13.8%
7.95%
29.0%
0.05%
0.05%
0.02%
0.68%
0.11%
0.17%
2.82% 3.92%
Commercial
0.29%
0.27%
0.15%
0.13%
0.19%
1.20%
1.01%
3.25%
Banking
0.02%
2.92% 3.15%
0.01%
0.07%
0.03%
0.04%
0.06%
Corporate
Finance
Payment and
Settlement
0.05%
0.51%
2.23%
4.25%
1.77% 2.35%
0.01%
0.03%
0.06%
0.09%
0.08%
0.28%
Agency and
0.08%
0.06%
0.13%
0.99%
0.03%
1.45%
2.78%
0.03%
Custody Services
1.68
0.12%
0.04%
0.01%
1.14%
0.11%
3.75% 6.91%
%
0.65%
0.79%
0.02%
2.03%
0.36%
1.25%
6.58%
11.7%
Asset
1.14%
100%
3.31%
42.4%
8.52%
7.17%
35.1%
1.40%
Management
15.5%
6.76%
13.1%
2.73%
7.23%
24.3%
29.4%
100%
0.00%
0.10%
0.06%
1.28%
Retail Brokerage
* Sample of 89 banks, 47,269 loss events and 7.8 billion in OR-related losses reported in The 2002 Loss
Total Exercise for Operational Risk: Summary of the Data Collected (Risk Management Group,
Data Collection
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, March 2003).
Note: Totals may not add up because no business line/event type information was provided for a few loss
23
OR Management
Framework*
Corporate Governance
Identification
and Assessment
Monitoring
Board of Directors to provide guidance, approve and
periodically review banks OR management framework
Senior management to translate framework into specific
policies, processes and procedures consistently and
comprehensively
Establishment of independent OR management function
OR identification based on process/activity maps, and loss
data collection
Development of forward-looking early warning indicators
and self-assessments
OR quantification, based on data sources and scenario
analysis
Validation and back-testing of results
Systematic tracking of loss events, KRIs and CRSA scores
Timely, accurate, relevant and periodic MIS and other (e.g.
heat map) reporting
Education and communication workshops, Forums etc.
Internal control policies, processes, procedures and
systems
Incorporation in budgeting, strategy and business
applications
Evaluation
of alternative
risk mitigants
* Largely based on Sound Practicesfor
the Management
and Supervision
of Operational Risk, Basel
Control and
Mitigation
Committee on Banking Supervision (February 2003).
24
Example: OR Control and
Mitigation
OR control and mitigation measures
Aimed at both center and tail of OR loss
distribution
Can be both preventive (ex ante) and
mitigating (ex post)
Increasingly based on cost-benefit analysis
There exists a variety of alternative
measures
Operational excellence initiatives, e.g. sixsigma, TQM etc.
Service Level Agreements with
vendors/service providers
Contingency planning and disaster recovery25
Evaluation of Basel OR
Framework
Pros
Forces banks to focus on growing OR issue
Encourages industry efforts for pooling of loss data
etc.
Allows AMA flexibility and offers simple alternative
for smaller banks
Cons
Weak risk sensitivity of non-AMA approaches
Arbitrary rules for Basic and Standardized
Approaches
- One-size-fits-all exposure indicators and alpha/beta
factors
- Ad hoc cap on mitigation from insurance
High compliance costs vs. unproven business
benefits for AMA
* Taken from
sub-title of Bank
Operational
Risk Management
(Moodys,
June 2002).
- Relatively
few
perceived
incentives
for banks
to
AMA
move to
26
Likely Impact of OR Capital
Charge
Calibrated to produce minimal change
at system level
Some redistribution of capital
requirements towards banks with large
specialized processing businesses
Examples: brokerage, custody and asset
management
May incentivize some of these institutions to
de-bank
Smaller domestic banks will opt for the
Basic or Standardized/Alternative
Standardized approach
27
Implications for Emerging
Markets
Similar themes to Basel IIs credit risk
framework
OR framework should not be examined in isolation
Issue
Questions
Scope of Is AMA adoption a realistic prospect?
applicati Will Basel II apply on a fully consolidated basis at
on
group level?
Arent the current alpha and beta factors
Calibrati calibrated too high?
on
Will the capital charges encourage foreign banks
to move out?
Home- How do you ensure coordination in cross-border
supervision?
host
recogniti How to level playing field between domestic and
on
foreign banks?
Isnt adherence to Basel Core Principles a
28
Conclusions
Basel II has made OR a distinct and
important discipline in its own right
Industry-wide convergence to OR
standards will continue to evolve for
the foreseeable future
Loss definitional issues, data collection
techniques and quantification
methodologies still under discussion
No one right answer on how to proceed
Approach based on strategic priorities,
organizational culture, practical (costbenefit) considerations and
market/regulatory developments
29
Appendix
30
Classification of Loss Events
EVENT-TYPE
CATEGORY
(LEVEL 1)
Internal Fraud
External Fraud
DEFINITION
CATEGORIES
(LEVEL 2)
ACTIVITY EXAMPLES
(LEVEL 3)
Losses due to acts of a type intended
to defraud, misappropriate property or
circumvent regulations, the law or
company policy, excluding
diversity/ discrimination events, which
involves at least one internal party
Unauthorized Activity Transactions not reported (intentional)
Trans type unauthorized (w/ monetary loss)
Mismarking of position (intentional)
Theft and Fraud
Fraud/ credit fraud/ worthless deposits
Theft/ extortion/ embezzlement/ robbery
Misappropriation of assets
Malicious destruction of assets
Forgery
Check kiting
Smuggling
Account take-over/ impersonation/ etc.
Tax non-compliance/ evasion (willful)
Bribes/ kickbacks
Insider trading (not on firm's account)
Losses due to acts of a type intended
to defraud, misappropriate property or
circumvent the law, by a third party
Theft and Fraud
Theft/ Robbery
Forgery
Check kiting
Systems Security
Hacking damage
Theft of information (w/ monetary loss)
31
EVENT-TYPE
CATEGORY
(LEVEL 1)
Classification of Loss
Events (cont.)
DEFINITION
Employment Practices Losses arising from acts
and Workplace Safety inconsistent with employment,
health or safety laws or
agreements, from payment of
personal injury claims, or from
diversity/ discrimination events
Clients, Products &
Business Practices
Losses arising from an
unintentional or negligent failure
to meet a professional obligation
to specific clients (including
fiduciary and suitability
requirements), or from the
nature or design of a product
CATEGORIES
(LEVEL 2)
ACTIVITY EXAMPLES
(LEVEL 3)
Employee Relations
Compensation, benefit, termination issues
Organized labor activity
Safe Environment
General liability (slip and fall, etc.)
Employee health & safety rules events
Workers compensation
Diversity &
Discrimination
All discrimination types
Suitability, Disclosure
& Fiduciary
Fiduciary breaches/ guideline violations
Suitability/ disclosure issues (KYC, etc.)
Retail consumer disclosure violations
Breach of privacy
Aggressive sales
Account churning
Misuse of confidential information
Lender Liability
Improper Business
or Market Practices
Antitrust
Improper trade/ market practices
Market manipulation
Insider trading (on firm's account)
Unlicensed activity
Money laundering
Product Flaws
Product defects (unauthorized, etc.)
Model errors
Selection, Sponsorship
& Exposure
Failure to investigate client per guidelines
Exceeding client exposure limits
Advisory Activities
Disputes over performance of advisory
activities
32
Classification of Loss
Events (cont.)
EVENT-TYPE
CATEGORY (LEVEL 1)
DEFINITION
CATEGORIES
(LEVEL 2)
ACTIVITY EXAMPLES
(LEVEL 3)
Damage to
Physical Assets
Losses arising from loss or damage to
Disasters and other
physical assets from natural disaster or other events
events
Natural disaster losses
Business Disruption
and System Failures
Losses arising from disruption of business
or system failures
Hardware
Execution, Delivery &
Process Management
Losses from failed transaction processing or Transaction Capture,
process management, from relations with
Execution &
trade counterparties and vendors
Maintenance
Systems
Human losses from external sources
(terrorism, vandalism)
Software
Telecommunications
Utility outage/ disruptions
Miscommunication
Data entry, maintenance or loading error
Missed deadline or responsibility
Model/ system misoperation
Accounting error/ entity attribution error
Other task misperformance
Delivery failure
Collateral management failure
Reference Data Maintenance
Monitoring and
Reporting
Failed mandatory reporting obligation
Inaccurate external report (loss incurred)
Customer Intake and
Documentation
Client permissions/ disclaimers missing
Legal documents missing/ incomplete
Customer/ Client
Account Management
Unapproved access given to accounts
Incorrect client records (loss incurred)
Negligent loss or damage of client assets
Trade Counterparties
Non-client counterparty misperformance
Misc. non-client counterparty disputes
Vendors & Suppliers
Outsourcing
Vendor disputes
33
Monetary Loss Types
Loss Type
Causes
Monetary Loss
Legal and
Liability
Lost legal suit
External legal and other related costs
in response to an operational risk
event
Regulatory,
Compliance
and Taxation
Penalties
Penalties paid to the
regulator
Fines or the direct cost of any other
penalties, such as license revocationassociated costs (excludes lost/forgone
revenues)
Loss or
Damage to
Assets
Neglect, accident, fire,
earthquake
Reduction in the value of the firms
non-financial assets and property
Restitution
Interest claims
(note: excludes legal
damages that are
addressed under Legal
and Liability costs)
Payments to third parties of principal
and/or interest, or the cost of any
other form of compensation paid to
clients and/or third parties
Loss of
Recourse
Inability to enforce a
legal claim on a third
party for the recovery of
assets due to an
operational error
Payments made to incorrect parties
and not recovered; includes losses
arising from incomplete registration of
collateral and inability to enforce
positions
Write Downs
Fraud, mis-represented
market and/or credit
risks
Direct reduction in value of financial
assets as a result of operational events34