Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ======Capital Requirements====== Capital Requirements are regulations that dictate the minimum amount of capital a financial institution, particularly a bank, must hold in relation to its assets. Think of it as a mandatory financial safety net. Regulators, like the `[[Federal Reserve]]` in the U.S. or the `[[European Central Bank]]` in Europe, impose these rules to ensure that banks can absorb unexpected losses without putting depositors' money at risk or, in a worst-case scenario, collapsing and triggering a wider financial panic. For an investor analyzing a bank, these requirements are not just tedious rules; they are a direct measure of the bank's resilience and risk appetite. A well-capitalized bank is like a sturdy ship built to withstand a storm, whereas an undercapitalized one might be a flimsy raft, fast and profitable in calm waters but terrifyingly vulnerable when the waves get choppy. Understanding these rules is a key step in separating a prudent, long-term investment from a risky gamble. ===== Why Do Capital Requirements Matter? ===== At its core, a bank's business model is a balancing act. It takes in money from depositors (a liability) and lends it out to people and businesses (an asset), earning a profit on the difference in interest rates, known as the `[[net interest margin]]`. The danger is that some of those loans will go bad. Capital is the bank’s own money—primarily from selling stock and retaining profits—that acts as a buffer to absorb these losses. ==== A Shield for the System ==== Without adequate capital, a wave of loan defaults could wipe out a bank's equity, making it insolvent. This is terrifying for two reasons: * **Depositors Lose Money:** Government deposit insurance schemes (like the `[[FDIC]]` in the US) offer protection, but a large-scale failure could strain even these systems. * **Systemic Risk:** The failure of one bank can cause a domino effect, leading to a loss of confidence throughout the entire financial system. The `[[2008 Financial Crisis]]` was a brutal lesson in what happens when banks operate with too little capital relative to their risky bets. Stricter capital requirements were a direct and necessary response to prevent a repeat performance. ==== The Concept of Risk-Weighting ==== Regulators know that not all assets are created equal. A loan to a government with a perfect credit history is far safer than a speculative commercial real estate loan. Therefore, capital requirements are based on `[[Risk-Weighted Assets (RWA)]]`. Each of a bank's assets is assigned a risk weight. A government bond might have a 0% risk weight (requiring no capital), while an unsecured personal loan might have a 100% risk weight. This forces banks to hold more capital against their riskier activities, creating a powerful incentive for prudent lending. ===== The Nuts and Bolts of Capital Ratios ===== To standardize these rules globally, regulators collaborate through the `[[Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS)]]`. This committee has produced a series of international agreements known as the `[[Basel Accords]]`. The most recent and important framework is `[[Basel III]]`, which significantly increased the quality and quantity of capital banks must hold. ==== The Tiers of Capital ==== Bank capital is sorted into different "tiers" based on its quality, meaning its ability to absorb losses. * `[[Tier 1 Capital]]`: This is the bank's core capital, the highest-quality stuff. It includes `[[Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1)]]`, which is made up of the bank's common stock and `[[retained earnings]]`. It's the first line of defense and can absorb losses without the bank being forced to stop operating. * `[[Tier 2 Capital]]`: This is supplementary capital. It includes things like `[[subordinated debt]]` and certain types of loan-loss reserves. It's less reliable because it can only absorb losses after a bank has already failed, but it still provides a cushion for depositors and senior creditors. ==== Key Ratios to Watch ==== When you open a bank's annual report, these are the magic numbers you should look for. They are always expressed as a percentage of the bank's Risk-Weighted Assets. - **`[[Common Equity Tier 1 (CET1) Ratio]]`:** //CET1 Capital / RWA//. This is the most scrutinized ratio and the ultimate test of a bank's ability to survive a crisis. It shows how much of the bank's purest capital is available to back its risky assets. - **`[[Tier 1 Capital Ratio]]`:** //Tier 1 Capital / RWA//. A slightly broader measure that still represents high-quality capital. - **`[[Total Capital Ratio]]`:** //(Tier 1 + Tier 2 Capital) / RWA//. This gives the full picture of the bank's capital buffer, including both core and supplementary funds. Regulators set minimums for each of these ratios (e.g., a CET1 ratio of 4.5% under Basel III), plus additional buffers that can raise the effective requirement significantly. ===== A Value Investor's Perspective ===== For `[[value investors]]`, analyzing a bank's capital is not about just checking a box. It's about understanding the trade-off between safety and profitability. ==== More Capital vs. More Profit ==== There's an inherent tension here. Higher capital requirements make a bank safer, which is great. However, that capital is "trapped"—it's not being lent out to generate profit. This can drag down a key metric of profitability, the `[[Return on Equity (ROE)]]`. A less-capitalized bank can use more `[[leverage]]` to magnify its returns (and its risks!). The value investor's goal is to find a bank in the sweet spot: * **Prudently Managed:** A bank that comfortably exceeds its minimum capital requirements, showing a commitment to safety and a buffer against unexpected economic downturns or regulatory `[[stress tests]]`. * **Efficiently Run:** A bank that, despite being well-capitalized, still generates a respectable ROE. This indicates a strong underlying business with a durable competitive advantage, or `[[moat]]`. A bank that is constantly flirting with its minimum capital ratios might be prioritizing short-term profits over long-term stability—a major red flag for any serious investor. When you find a bank that is both a fortress of capital //and// a highly efficient profit-generator, you may have found a true gem.