Internal Models, Subordinated Debt, and Regulatory Capital Requirements for Bank Credit Risk

Shortcomings make credit VaR estimates an unsuitable basis for setting bank regulatory capital requirements. If, alternatively, banks are required to issue subordinated debt that has a minimum market value and maximum acceptable probability of default, banks must set their equity capital in a manner that limits both the probability of bank default and the expected loss on insured deposits, largely removing any safety net-related funding cost subsidy and the moral hazard incentives it creates. Required equity capital can be estimated using a modified credit-VaR framework, and supervisors can use external credit ratings to indirectly verify the accuracy of bank internal model estimates.
Publication date: September 2002
ISBN: 9781451857504
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Banks and Banking , Banks and Banking , Finance , Finance , regulatory capital requirements , credit VaR , subordinated debt , internal risk models , deposit insurance , bond , banking , equity capital , General Financial Markets: Government Policy and Regulation , Financial Institutions and Services: General , Financial Institutions

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