Economics
Ford: spanner in the works?
Credit of the month
Trouble below deck
German focus
High-grade dreams
Special report Russia
Op risk floor removed to give flexibility
BASEL, SWITZERLAND - Global banking regulators have removed the operational risk capital floor previously proposed under the Basel II capital accord to give banks flexibility in developing op risk management systems.
Op risk floor removed to give flexibility
BASEL II UPDATE
Equity poses the big questions
Roundtable
A slow evolution
Credit risk
ABB: a mixed outlook
Hold
High-yield survival
Profile
Floating towards disaster
Argentine peso risk
Turn in cycle still elusive
Media Sector
Dealing with the flak
Profile
Turkish crossover
Turkey
Down but not out
Non-deliverable forwards
Rising levels of interest
Interest rate derivatives
Descending to greater heights
Subordinated debt
Software survey 2002 |
Some online risk management products failed to live up to expectations last year, but software vendors forge ahead, developing products that support fast-growing markets such as credit derivatives and CDOs, and tools to help banks meet Basel II…
Will Germany scupper Basel II?
How real is Germany’s threat to veto the proposed Basel II bank capital accord if the country fails to get the concessions it wants on the accord’s treatment of bank lending to small to medium-sized companies (SMEs)?
ICI prospects looking bleak
Limited upside potential
Will Germany scupper Basle II?
BASLE II UPDATE
Asia credit set to recover, claims ING Barings
Asian credit is set to recover by the end of the year, as domestic investors regain confidence and return to the region, according to ING Barings’ analysts, speaking at a press conference in Hong Kong today. Asian credit spreads have widened sharply in…
Pro-cyclicality in the new Basel Accord
Could Basel II worsen recessions? By backtesting the proposed capital rules to the last recession, D. Wilson Ervin and Tom Wilde argue that the increased risk sensitivity of loan portfolio regulatory capital in the new Accord could have unwelcome…
A credit conundrum
Credit risk