Basel III is a global regulatory standard on bank capital adequacy, It is an international regulatory accord that introduced a set of reforms designed to improve the regulation, supervision and risk management within the banking sector.
This training course provides a comprehensive overview of not only what the past, present and likely future rules are, and how they apply to different institutions, but also what their underlying purpose is, why they have evolved in the way they have, and how banks can adopt optimal strategies to maximise their profits and minimise risk whilst at the same time staying fully compliant with the spirit and the letter of the rules.
The overall goal of this Five-day course is to provide participants with a general overview of current financial regulation under the Basel Accords.
We achieve this by a combination of theory and practice, including case studies from financial institutions, as well as reviewing the actual regulatory documents from the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision (BCBS), the European Banking Authority (EBA), the EU Capital Requirements Regulation (CRR) and Capital Requirements Directive IV (CRD IV)
The Bank Capital Adequacy Under Basel III Training Course will:
- Explain the purpose, principles, evolution and application of the Basel Capital Adequacy regulations and what is required in terms of:
- regulatory capital
- risk weighted assets
- Capital Adequacy ratios
- Enable participants to apply the Basel Capital Adequacy rules to specific banks
- Understand how the institutions of the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision (BCBS) and the European Banking Authority (EBA) operate and what the shape of future European banking regulation will look like
- Examine how banking risk remains despite regulation and how banks can and do organise their strategy in the context of Basel Capital Adequacy regulations
The Bank Capital Adequacy Under Basel III Course is suitable for:
- Risk managers, regulators, internal auditors, bankers and analysts, but is also appropriate for a broader audience who wish to gain insight into capital adequacy and its importance for banks.
- It is targeted at an intermediate level and assumes only a basic understanding of accounting, financial products and banking functions.