Asset Liability Management
Asset Liability Management
Asset Liability Management
ALM
asit
Basel II
Pillar 1 Capital Adequacy Ratio =
Regulatory Capital Funds
-------------------------------------------------Risk Weighted Assets (On & Off B/S)
9%
Total Risk Weighted Assets =
[Mkt RWA + Operational RWA+ Credit RWA]
Basel III
In Dec 2010, BCBS issued the Basel III guidelines on the
new regulatory standards for bank capital adequacy
and liquidity
The Reserve Bank of India issued the final Basel III
Capital Regulations in May 2012 which came into force
from 1st of April 2013 in a phased manner over 5 years
In Mar 2014, RBI extended the deadline for full
implementation of Basel III capital ratios to 31 st March
2019.
Basel III is not a replacement of Basel II but a series of
amendments and enhancements to the existing Basel II
framework (NCAF in India) with the objective of
improving the banking sectors ability to absorb shocks
arising from financial and economic stress.
Liquidity
Standards
Higher Minimum
Equity Capital
Better Quality,
Consistency and
Transparency of
Capital
Higher Capital
Requirement via
Capital Conservation
Buffer
Minimum Leverage
Ratio
Systemic Risk
Enhanced
Risk Cover
CVA Capital
Charge for OTC
Derivatives
Higher Capital
Charge for
Securitisation
Exposures
Procyclical Capital
Buffer
Capital Surcharge
for Systemic Banks
% of
RWA
6.0%
3.6%
0.9%
2.4%
Basel III
Regulatory Pillar 1 Capital
Components
Tier 1 Capital (Going Concern Capital)
(Min)
- Common Equity Tier 1 (Min)
- Additional Tier 1 (Max)
Tier 2 Capital (Gone Concern Capital)
(Max)
CAR Pillar 1 (Min)
% of
RWA
7.0%
5.5%
1.5%
2.0%
3.0%
9.0%
2.50
3.0% Capital Conservation Buffer (Min)
%
11.5
9.0%
CAR + CCB (Min)
%
Transitional Arrangements
Transitional Arrangements - Scheduled Commercial Banks
(% of RWAs)
4.5
4.5
6.5
Capital Conservation
Buffer (CCB)
Minimum CET 1 + CCB
5.5
5.5
5.5
5.5
5.5
0 0.625
1.25 1.875
2.5
5.5 6.125
6.75 7.375
Cost to
Bank
Regulatory Capital
High
Common Equity,
Reserves &
Surplus,
Retained Earnings
Lower Tier I
Upper Tier II
Lower Tier II
Subordinated debt
(Dated)
Tier I
50% at least
of minimum
capital ratio
of 8%
Max up to 100% of
Tier I (along with
Lower Tier II)
Max up to 50% of
Tier I
Loss
Risk to
Absorption investor
High
High
Low
Low
ROE:14% - 16%
9.25% - 11.15%
9.10% - 10.85%
7. 5% - 9.45%
Low
Asit Mohanty
Outline
OBJECTIVES OF ALM
Scope of ALM
Liquidity Risk
Liquidity Profile of
Assets & Liabilities
across time Buckets
Interest Rate
Risk
Interest Rate Sensitive
Position of Assets &
Liabilities
Modified Duration at
Product Level
Modified Duration Gap
of the Balance Sheet
Risk Based Pricing of
Loans
Earnings/MV
E Analysis
EaR Analysis
MVE Analysis
EVA Analysis
Value at Risk
Both Asset &
Liability
Mean Reversion
Interest Rate Model for
forecasting of Interest
Rate
Pre Payment
Modelsprepayment
rate of the Retail
Mortgage Loan
Valuation of
Banks
NPV Method to
measure Interest Rate
Risk in Banking Book
Scenario Manager
Worst Case
ALM
ALM Process
Flow
Common
Inputs
ALM Computations
(CBS)
ALM Output
Contractual
Perpetual
OBS
Residual &
GL based
Simulations
Periodic
Contractual Positions
IAS 39
IRR
LR
Simulations
Daily Liquidity
Periodic
Behavioral Models
Scenario Manager
Scenarios
NII
IRR
LR
NII
MD
ALM
MVE
Gap
Ratios
EaR
Projected Balance
Sheet
Projected P&L
Sungard ALM
Kamakura Risk Manager (KRM)
FERMAT ALM
Piper
TruView
Fermat ALM
RV Limits
FXAT
MeasuRisk
Askari
Fermat
MKIRisk
Alphametrics
OpenLink
IPS-Sendero
BARRA, Inc.
IRIS integrated ri
sk management
ag
SunGard Trading a
nd Risk Systems
Risk Trade
RiskBox.com Ltd
http://www.bobsguide.com/guide/ass
et-and-liability-managementsolutions-2.html
ALM Instruments.Contd
Assets
Liabilities
Asset Liability
Management
Sensitive Assets:
Loans
Investments
Balances with other banks (except Current Account)
1 to 28 days
29 days and up to 3 months
Over 3 months and up to 6 months
Over 6 months and up to 1 year
Over 1 year and up to 3 years
Over 3 years and up to 5 years
Over 5 years
Non -Sensitive
Liability
Rate sensitivity and Re pricing time bucket
Current Account.Non-sensitive.
SB RSL
Liability
Rate sensitivity and Re pricing time bucket
Liability
Rate sensitivity and Re pricing time bucket
Borrowings.Floating Rate
Asset
Rate sensitivity and Re pricing time bucket
CashNon - sensitive.
Balances with RBI
.Non - sensitive
Asset
Rate sensitivity and Re pricing time bucket
Sensitive on maturity
Asset
Rate sensitivity and Re pricing time bucket
Net NPA
Sub-standard Asset(SA). Over 3-5 years
bucket..sensitive during the Recovery
period
Doubtful and Loss Over 5 years
bucket sensitive during Recovery the
period
200
300
200
RSL
100
500
300
RS Net Gap
100(AS)
-200(LS)
-100(LS)
RS Cumulative Gap
100
-100(LS)
-200(LS)
Observations:
One year cumulative gap is liability sensitive.
The increase in interest rate would result in reduction of NII.
For 1% change the interest rate, NII will decline by Rs.2 crore.
RESIDUAL MATURITY
TOTAL
LIABILITIES
(A)
TOTAL ASSETS
(B)
GAP
(C=B-A)
1 TO 28 DAYS
2188
2481
293
29 DAYS TO 3 MONTHS
565
978
413
1557
4256
2699
1544
789
-755
2995
2980
-15
11023
7895
-3128
OVER 5 YEARS
4349
3361
-988
NON SENSITIVE
5870
7680
1810
TOTAL
30091
30420
329
Investment
10
70
100
Advances
80
90
0.025
Gap Analysis
Take a view on change in ROI for
different RSA & RSL
Multiply the value of RSA & RSL in a
time bucket by expected interest rate
change
Compute gap
Gap risk
Rate Sensitive Asset & Liability
Position are different in a particular
Re pricing time bucket
Lead to gap risk
Gap report
Gap Analysis
Challenge
Identify Rate Sensitive Position and
re pricing date
Limitation
Assumes Parallel shift in yield
curveignores basis risk
Ignores time value of money
Gap Risk
Basis Risk
No Gap Risk
But Basis Risk
Basis risk
Change in Interest rate on assets and liabilities is not in
the same proportion
If Repo is Rs. 50 crore & deposits is Rs.75 crore, whereas
loans = Rs 125 cr
When Repo Rate declines by 50 bps, deposit rates is
declined by 1.5%. and Lending Rate by.. 1.0%
NII & NIM ?
Therefore, basis risk arises when interest rates of different
assets and liabilities change in different magnitudes
Basis risk
What happens to NII?
Fall in NII by Rs 0.48 crore.
Change in NII is -0.48 crore
70*10%
Earning @ Risk
Elasticity-based Pricing
Determining elasticity
A regression equation might be set up to examine the
historical relationship between deposit volumes, GNP
levels, rates offered by bank, rates offered by
competitors, rates offered on similar non-bank
products and number of branches.
Past volumes of deposits should also be considered.
The strength of the relationship between own rates
and deposit balances captures the price elasticity
of deposits.
Opinions of branch mangers should also be factored.
Interpretation
Elasticity captures the degree of interbank
competition higher elasticity makes customers more
jittery and may result in a loss of deposit supply or
fall in demand for loans..
It may push up deposit rates when market rates are
rising, or push up lending rates when rates are rising..
DR = c - b1 log(deposit volume)
+ b2 GDP + b3 competitors rate
+ b4 rates offered on similar non-bank products
+ b5 log(deposit volume(-1))
+ residuals