Einde inhoudsopgave
Prudential regulation of investment firms in the European Union (ZIFO nr. 32) 2021/9.2.3.0
9.2.3.0 Introductie
mr. drs. B.J. Nieuwenhuijzen, datum 01-02-2021
- Datum
01-02-2021
- Auteur
mr. drs. B.J. Nieuwenhuijzen
- JCDI
JCDI:ADS262348:1
- Vakgebied(en)
Financieel recht / Bank- en effectenrecht
Financieel recht / Financieel toezicht (juridisch)
Voetnoten
Voetnoten
See page 12 of the IFR Proposal.
See paragraph 117 of the Annex to the EBA 2017 report.
See paragraph 120 of the Annex to the EBA 2017 report.
Annex to the EBA Opinion Eba-Op-2017-11; in response to the European Commission’s Call for Advice of 13 June 2016”, 29 September 2017, see paragraph 121.
Annex to the EBA Opinion Eba-Op-2017-11; in response to the European Commission’s Call for Advice of 13 June 2016”, 29 September 2017, see paragraph 122.
See paragraph 149 of the EBA 2017 report.
Annex to the EBA Opinion Eba-Op-2017-11; in response to the European Commission’s Call for Advice of 13 June 2016”, 29 September 2017, see paragraph 123
See paragraph 178 of the EBA 2017 report.
400. The prudential regime for investment firms in the IFR is based on a new approach to measuring risks. Whereas under the CRD 2013 and the CRR investment firms subject to the CRR were obliged to quantify their credit, market and operational risk in accordance with risk-weighting methods fundamentally designed for banks, the new prudential regime contains a risk measurement approach based on the actual business models of investment firms. The “K-factor” approach is designed around three main risk concepts: Risk to Customers, Risk to Markets and Risk to Firm.1 To measure the risks to which an investment firm is exposed under these three risk concepts, the risks of certain business models needs to be captured. These business model risks are labelled “K-Factors” and address risks related to activities such as portfolio management, execution of orders and giving investment advice. The K-Factor approach also capitalizes market risks under the Risk to Market K-Factors and counterparty risk and certain operational risks under the Risk to Firm K-Factors. The intention of the new regime was to design a set of K-Factors that capture the majority of business models applied in the investment firm sector, and the inherent risks of these business models for investment firms. To measure these risk concepts, the IFR contains a number of K-Factors that address certain risks associated with the business of an investment firm. These K-Factors are described in the following table included in the Staff Working Document of the EC proposal:
Table 1: List of K-Factors
Risk Type
K-Factor
Metric
Rationale
Risk To Customer
K-AUM
Assets under management
The risk of harm to clients from incorrect discretionary management of customer portfolios or poor execution, providing customer reassurance in terms of the continuity of service of ongoing portfolio management and advice
K-CMH
Client money held
The risk of harm where an investment firm holds the money of its customers, regardless of whether they are on its own balance sheet or segregated in other accounts.
K-ASA
Assets safeguarded and administered
The risk of safeguarding and administering customer assets, and ensures that investment firms hold capital in proportion to such balances, regardless of whether they are on its own balance sheet or segregated in other accounts.
K-COH
Customer orders handled
The risk to clients of a firm which executes their orders in the name of the client, and not in the name of the firm itself, e.g. as part of ‘execution-only’ services and in the reception and transmission of orders.
Risk To Market
K-NPR
Net position risk
The risk of trading exposures in financial instruments, FX and commodities based on the CRR
K-CMG
Clearing member guaranteed
The margin posted with a clearing member against trading risks
Risk To Firm
K-TCD
Trading counterparty default
The risk to an investment firm of counterparties failing to fulfil their obligations, multiplying exposures by risk factors based on the CRR, taking into account the mitigating effects of effective netting and the exchange of collateral
K-CON
Concentration risk
Individual or highly connected private sector counterparties with whom firms have exposures above 25% of their capital and resulting in capital add-ons in line with the CRR.
K-DTF
Daily trading flow
The operational risks in large volumes of intra-day trades based on the gross value of settled cash trades and notional value of derivatives.
401. It should be noted that the “rationale” provided by the EC in this table is not always a rationale. For certain K-factors in this table, the rationale is more of a short description. In the following sections of this study the rationale for these K-factors will be further discussed, starting with a discussion on the elaborations established by the EBA in its work towards defining the prudential framework.
The EBA concluded in its report that “there is a clear need to develop a single, harmonized set of requirements that are reasonably simple, proportionate and more relevant to the nature of investment business than the existing requirements, to cover the broad range of all types of investment firms”.2 According to the EBA “the K-factors need to be based upon readily observable metrics, preferably the sort of information a firm might generally wish to know and hold about its business (rather than capturing something that has a meaning only for the purpose of calculating its regulatory capital requirements)”.3
Risk to Customers (RtC) is defined by the EBA in its 2017 report as a means to “capture the on-going impact that an investment firm can have on others. […] the most important element of risk will be the potential for harm they may pose to their customers (e.g. where they do not carry out the relevant investment services correctly)”.4
The EBA defines Risk to Market (RtM) as “the impact that an investment firm can have on the markets in which it operates. For example, should the firm fail or otherwise need to exit that market, particularly if this occurs suddenly, a temporary dislocation in market access or market liquidity may be observed and market confidence could be questioned”.5 The EBA intended the RtM K-factors “to act as a proxy for the ‘market footprint’ that the investment firm might have”.6 According to the EBA, the market risk concepts in the CRR most closely resembled the idea of market footprint, and as such the EBA recommended incorporating the market risk framework into the net position risk K-Factor.
Risk to Firm (RtF), according to the EBA, comes from “a firm that is financially weak or in trouble itself can be more susceptible to poor behaviour, weaker controls and greater risk-taking as it seeks to correct its fortunes. This in turn suggests that any RtF could increase the probability that RtC or RtM occurs, and/or amplify its impact if it does occur, and so should not be overlooked”.7 The EBA “believes that counterparty credit risk and single name concentration [are] important exposure risks for firms that deal on their own account or trade in their own name when executing clients’ orders and should, therefore, be addressed within the overall framework as RtF. Moreover, RtF should also address the operational risks that stem from the activity of dealing on one’s own account or trading in one’s own name when executing clients’ orders”.8