September 17, 2025

Basel III Norms

Syllabus: General Studies Paper 3

Indian banks may continue their fundraising spree in the next few months by issuing Basel III-compliant and infrastructure bonds as they rush to meet rising credit demand and lock in funds at cheaper rates.

Basel Norms

  • Basel norms or Basel accords are the international banking regulations issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision.
  • The Basel norms is an effort to coordinate banking regulations across the globe, with the goal of strengthening the international banking system.
  • It is the set of the agreement by the Basel committee of Banking Supervision which focuses on the risks to banks and the financial system.
  • Objective: To improve the banking sector’s ability to absorb shocks arising from financial and economic stress, to reduce the risk of spill over from the financial sector to the real economy, to raise capital standard and to implement strong international compensation standards aimed at ending practices that lead to excessive risk-taking.

BASEL I

  • BCBS introduced the capital measurement system called Basel capital accord in 1988. It was also known as Basel 1.
  • It was almost entirely concerned with credit risk.
  • It established the capital and risk-weighting structure for banks.
  • The required minimum capital was set at 8% of risk-weighted assets (RWA).
  • RWA refers to assets with varying risk profiles. For example, an asset backed by collateral would be less risky than a personal loan with no collateral.
  • Capital is divided into two categories: Tier 1 capital and Tier 2 capital.

BASEL II

  • BCBS published Basel II guidelines in June 2004, which were considered to be refined and reformed versions of the Basel I accord.
  • The guidelines were founded on three pillars, as the committee refers to them:
  • Capital Adequacy Requirements: Banks should keep a minimum capital adequacy requirement of 8% of risk assets.
  • Supervisory Review: According to this, banks were required to develop and implement better risk management techniques for monitoring and managing all three types of risks that a bank faces: credit, market, and operational risks.
  • Market Discipline: This necessitates stricter disclosure requirements. Banks must report their CAR, risk exposure, and other information to the central bank on a regular basis.

BASEL III

  • The Basel III guidelines were published in 2010.
  • These guidelines were put in place in response to the 2008 financial crisis.
  • There was a need to further strengthen the system because banks in developed economies were undercapitalized, over-leveraged, and relied more on short-term funding.
  • Furthermore, the quantity and quality of capital required under Basel II were deemed insufficient to contain any additional risk.
  • The Basel III norms aim to make most banking activities, such as trading books, more capital-intensive.
  • The guidelines are intended to promote a more resilient banking system by focusing on four critical banking parameters: capital, leverage, funding, and liquidity.
  • It consists of undisclosed reserves, preference shares, and subordinate debt.
  • In 1999, India adopted the Basel 1 guidelines.

About Basel III compliant Bonds

  • The bonds qualify as tier II capital of the bank, and has a face value of Rs 10 lakh each, bearing a coupon rate of 6.24 per cent per annum payable annually for a tenor of 10 years.
  • There is a call option after 5 years and on anniversary thereafter.
  • Call option means the issuer of the bonds can call back the bonds before the maturity date by paying back the principal amount to investors.
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