At 31 December 2013
|
At 31 December 2012
|
||||||
Capital
required
|
RWAs
|
Capital
required
|
RWAs
|
||||
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
||||
By Region
|
|||||||
Europe ...............................................................................
|
2.8
|
35.1
|
2.7
|
34.3
|
|||
Hong Kong ........................................................................
|
1.3
|
16.8
|
1.2
|
15.4
|
|||
Rest of Asia-Pacific ...........................................................
|
2.2
|
27.3
|
2.1
|
26.1
|
|||
MENA ...............................................................................
|
0.5
|
6.0
|
0.5
|
5.9
|
|||
North America ...................................................................
|
1.4
|
17.2
|
1.9
|
23.7
|
|||
Latin America ....................................................................
|
1.3
|
16.8
|
1.4
|
16.9
|
|||
9.5
|
119.2
|
9.8
|
122.3
|
||||
By Global Business
|
|||||||
Retail Banking and Wealth Management ............................
|
3.1
|
38.8
|
3.6
|
44.7
|
|||
Commercial Banking ..........................................................
|
2.6
|
32.9
|
2.5
|
31.4
|
|||
Global Banking and Markets ...............................................
|
3.5
|
43.3
|
3.3
|
41.4
|
|||
Global Private Banking ......................................................
|
0.3
|
3.9
|
0.3
|
4.1
|
|||
Other .................................................................................
|
-
|
0.3
|
0.1
|
0.7
|
|||
9.5
|
119.2
|
9.8
|
122.3
|
· fraudulent and other external criminal activities;
|
· breakdowns in processes/procedures due to human error, misjudgement or malice;
|
· terrorist attacks;
|
· system failure or non-availability; and
|
· in certain parts of the world, vulnerability to natural disasters.
|
More details on the 'Three lines of defence' model and our ORMF may be found on page 244 of the
Annual Report and Accounts 2013.
|
· making specific changes to strengthen the internal control environment;
|
· investigating whether cost-effective insurance cover is available to mitigate the risk; and
|
· other means of protecting us from loss.
|
· investments delivering a return below that required to provide the projected plan benefits. This could arise, for example, when there is a fall in the market value of equities, or when increases in long-term interest rates cause a fall in the value of fixed income securities held;
|
· the prevailing economic environment leading to corporate failures, thus triggering write-downs in asset values (both equity and debt);
|
· a change in either interest rates or inflation which causes an increase in the value of the scheme liabilities; and
|
· scheme members living longer than expected (known as longevity risk).
|
· to define the rules governing the transfer of interest rate risk from the commercial bank to Balance Sheet Management ('BSM');
|
· to ensure that all market interest rate risk that can be hedged is effectively transferred from the global businesses to BSM; and
|
· to define the rules and metrics for monitoring the residual interest rate risk in the global businesses.
|
· risk which is transferred to BSM and managed by BSM within a defined risk mandate;
|
· risk which remains outside BSM because it cannot be hedged or which arises due to our behaviouralised transfer pricing assumptions. This risk will be captured by our net interest income or Economic Value of Equity ('EVE')
sensitivity, and corresponding limits are part of our global and regional risk appetite statements for non-trading interest rate risk. A typical example would be margin compression created by unusually low rates in key currencies;
|
· basis risk which is transferred to BSM when it can be hedged. Any residual basis risk remaining in the global businesses is reported to ALCO. A typical example would be a managed rate savings product transfer-priced using a
Libor-based interest rate curve; and |
· model risks which cannot be captured by net interest income or EVE sensitivity, but are controlled by our stress testing framework. A typical example would be prepayment risk on residential mortgages or pipeline risk.
|
Details of the Group's monitoring of the sensitivity of projected net interest income under varying interest rate scenarios may be found on page 240 of the
Annual Report and Accounts 2013.
|
At 31 December 2013
|
At 31 December 2012
|
||||||||||
Available
|
Designated
|
|
Available
|
Designated
|
|||||||
for sale
|
at fair value
|
Total
|
for sale
|
at fair value
|
Total
|
||||||
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
US$bn
|
||||||
Strategic investments ..............
|
5.2
|
0.1
|
5.3
|
10.0
|
0.1
|
10.1
|
|||||
Private equity investments ......
|
2.7
|
0.1
|
2.8
|
2.9
|
0.1
|
3.0
|
|||||
Business facilitation1 ...............
|
1.2
|
-
|
1.2
|
1.1
|
-
|
1.1
|
|||||
9.1
|
0.2
|
9.3
|
14.0
|
0.2
|
14.2
|
|
1 Includes holdings in government-sponsored enterprises and local stock exchanges.
|
Details of our accounting policy for AFS equity investments and the valuation of financial instruments may be found on pages 439 and 433, respectively, of the
Annual Report and Accounts 2013.
A detailed description of the valuation techniques applied to private equity may be found on page 487 of the
Annual Report and Accounts 2013.
|
Global business aligned
|
|||||||||||
Retail
Banking
and Wealth
Management
|
Commercial
Banking
|
Global
Banking and
Markets
|
Global
Private
Banking
|
Non-global business aligned
|
Total
|
||||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
||||||
Aggregate remuneration expenditure
(Code Staff)
1,2
|
|||||||||||
2013 ............................................
|
39.7
|
14.6
|
309.0
|
44.9
|
171.2
|
579.4
|
|||||
2012 ...............................................
|
41.8
|
21.0
|
293.1
|
32.2
|
141.0
|
529.1
|
|
1 Code Staff is defined in the Glossary.
|
|
2 Includes salary and incentives awarded in respect of performance in the years 2012 and 2013 (including deferred component) and any pension or benefits outside of policy.
|
2013
|
2012
|
||||||||||
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
||||||
Number of Code Staff ...................................
|
66
|
264
|
330
|
50
|
264
|
314
|
|||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
||||||
Fixed
|
|||||||||||
Cash based ....................................................
|
52.6
|
101.1
|
153.7
|
43.5
|
101.2
|
144.7
|
|||||
Total fixed ...................................................
|
52.6
|
101.1
|
153.7
|
43.5
|
101.2
|
144.7
|
|||||
Variable1
|
|||||||||||
Cash .............................................................
|
19.0
|
60.1
|
79.1
|
15.1
|
60.2
|
75.3
|
|||||
Non-deferred shares2 ....................................
|
18.9
|
56.5
|
75.4
|
14.6
|
57.0
|
71.6
|
|||||
Deferred cash ...............................................
|
26.6
|
79.3
|
105.9
|
20.9
|
80.4
|
101.3
|
|||||
Deferred shares .............................................
|
72.4
|
92.8
|
165.2
|
53.7
|
82.4
|
136.1
|
|||||
Total variable pay ........................................
|
136.9
|
288.7
|
425.6
|
104.3
|
280.0
|
384.3
|
|
1 Variable pay awarded in respect of performance in the years 2012 and 2013.
|
|
2 Vested shares, subject to a six-month retention period.
|
2013
|
2012
|
||||||||||
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
||||||
Number of Code Staff ....................................
|
35
|
157
|
192
|
23
|
168
|
191
|
|||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
||||||
Total fixed ....................................................
|
30.4
|
53.7
|
84.1
|
23.5
|
57.2
|
80.7
|
|||||
Total variable pay1 ........................................
|
86.0
|
120.3
|
206.3
|
58.7
|
123.9
|
182.6
|
|
1 Variable pay awarded in respect of performance in the years 2012 and 2013.
|
2013
|
2012
|
||||||||||
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
||||||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
||||||
Deferred remuneration at 31 December
|
|||||||||||
Outstanding, unvested2 ...................................
|
213.4
|
331.7
|
545.1
|
199.8
|
402.0
|
601.8
|
|||||
Awarded during the year3 ...............................
|
87.0
|
159.6
|
246.6
|
98.0
|
173.4
|
271.4
|
|||||
Paid out4 ........................................................
|
110.7
|
269.9
|
380.6
|
155.2
|
393.6
|
548.8
|
|||||
Reduced through malus ...................................
|
0.4
|
-
|
0.4
|
0.7
|
-
|
0.7
|
|
1 This table provides details of actions taken during the performance years 2012 and 2013. For details of variable pay awards granted for the performance years 2012 and 2013, please refer to tables 49 and 50.
|
|
2 Value of deferred cash and shares unvested at 31 December 2012 and 31 December 2013.
|
|
3 Value of deferred cash and shares awarded during 2012 and 2013 with share price taken at 31 December of the respective year.
|
|
4 Value of vested shares and cash during 2012 and 2013. Share price taken at day of vesting.
|
2013
|
2012
|
||||||||||
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
||||||
Sign-on payments
|
|||||||||||
Made during year (US$m) .............................
|
-
|
3.7
|
3.7
|
3.0
|
-
|
3.0
|
|||||
Number of beneficiaries ................................
|
-
|
3
|
3
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
|||||
Severance payments
|
|||||||||||
Made during year (US$m) .............................
|
1.1
|
1.6
|
2.7
|
-
|
2.1
|
2.1
|
|||||
Number of beneficiaries ................................
|
3
|
5
|
8
|
-
|
2
|
2
|
|||||
Highest such award to single person (US$m) .
|
0.6
|
0.6
|
|
-
|
2.0
|
2.0
|
Number of Code Staff 2013
|
Number of Code Staff 2012
|
||||||||||
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
Senior
manage-
ment
|
Code Staff
(non-senior
manage-
ment)
|
Total
|
||||||
€0 - €1,000,000 ...........................................
|
11
|
139
|
150
|
6
|
145
|
151
|
|||||
€1,000,001 - €1,500,000 .............................
|
19
|
44
|
63
|
16
|
40
|
56
|
|||||
€1,500,001 - €2,000,000 .............................
|
9
|
33
|
42
|
6
|
27
|
33
|
|||||
€2,000,001 - €2,500,000 .............................
|
6
|
19
|
25
|
3
|
18
|
21
|
|||||
€2,500,001 - €3,000,000 .............................
|
7
|
16
|
23
|
8
|
19
|
27
|
|||||
€3,000,001 - €3,500,000 .............................
|
4
|
10
|
14
|
4
|
9
|
13
|
|||||
€3,500,001 - €4,000,000 .............................
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
1
|
3
|
4
|
|||||
€4,000,001 - €4,500,000 .............................
|
3
|
1
|
4
|
3
|
2
|
5
|
|||||
€4,500,001 - €5,000,000 .............................
|
3
|
-
|
3
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
|||||
€5,000,001 - €6,000,000 .............................
|
-
|
1
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
1
|
|||||
€6,000,001 - €7,000,000 .............................
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
|||||
€7,000,001 - €8,000,000 .............................
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
|||||
€8,000,001 - €9,000,000 .............................
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
1
|
-
|
1
|
|
1 Table prepared in euros in accordance with Article 450 of the Regulation under CRD IV, at an exchange rate to the US dollar of US$1: euro € 0.753095.
|
|
|
1. fixed pay;
|
2. benefits;
|
3. annual incentive; and
|
4. the Group Performance Share Plan ('GPSP')
|
|
1 Inclusive of dividends to holders of other equity instruments and net of scrip issuance. Dividends per ordinary share declared in respect of 2013 were US$0.49, an increase of 9% compared with 2012.
|
|
2 Total variable pay pool for 2013 net of tax and portion to be delivered by the award of HSBC Shares.
|
· Senior Management whose roles are judged as falling within the PRA Code Staff definition (including executive board Directors, Group Managing Directors and Group General Managers);
|
· Staff performing a Significant Influence Function within HSBC Bank plc (including non-executive Directors ('NEDs');
|
· Executive, Management and Operating Committee members (excluding specific roles that do not have a significant risk impact) of GPB, GB&M, Global Banking, Global Markets (including regional committees), CMB and RBWM.
|
· High earners who have a material impact on the risk profile of the Group.
|
Eligibility
|
||||
Description
|
Purpose and relevant features
|
Senior
Management
|
Other Code Staff excluding NEDs
|
NEDs
|
Fixed Pay
|
·
Fixed pay reflects the individual's role, experience and responsibility. Changes are made within the context of local requirements and market practice.
·
Base salaries are benchmarked on an annual basis against relevant comparator groups as disclosed in the Directors' Remuneration Report on page 388 of the
Annual Report and Accounts 2013
.
|
X
|
X
|
|
Fees
|
·
The fee levels payable reflect the time commitment and responsibilities required of a non-executive Director of HSBC Holdings plc.
·
Fees are determined by benchmark against other UK companies and banks in the FTSE 30, and with reference to the fees paid by other non-UK international banks.
|
X
|
||
Variable Pay
|
||||
Annual Incentive
|
·
Drives and rewards performance against annual financial and non-financial measures and adherence to HSBC Values which are consistent with the medium to long-term strategy and aligns to shareholder interests. Deferral structure provides retention value and the ability to apply malus.
·
Maximum award can be three times fixed pay for executive Directors.
·
40% to 60% of the annual incentive is deferred over a period of three years, in line with the PRA requirements. 50% of both the deferred and non-deferred components will be in the form of restricted shares with the remaining 50% in cash. Vesting of deferred awards, both cash and shares, will be annually over a three-year period with 33% vesting on the first anniversary of grant, 33% on the second anniversary and 34% on the third anniversary. Deferred and non-deferred share awards (net of shares sold to cover any income tax and social security)
will be subject to a six-month retention period following vesting. Any Code Staff employee with total remuneration of no more than £500,000 (or local currency equivalent) and variable pay which is no more than 33% of total remuneration will not be subject to the Code Staff deferral policy but will be subject to the Group minimum deferral policy. During the vesting period, the Committee has the power to apply malus to part or all of the award.
·
The award is non-pensionable.
|
X
|
X
|
|
GPSP
|
·
To incentivise sustainable long-term performance through the use of pre-grant performance measures and aligns with shareholder interests by requiring shares to be held for the duration of employment. Five-year vesting period provides retention value and the ability to apply malus.
·
Maximum award can be six times fixed pay.
·
Award levels are determined by considering performance up to the end of the financial year against enduring performance measures set out in the long-term performance scorecard.
·
The award is subject to a five-year vesting period during which the Committee has the authority to apply malus to part or all of the award.
·
On vesting the shares (net of shares sold to cover any income tax and social security) must be retained for the duration of the participant's employment.
·
The award is non-pensionable.
|
X
|
Measure
|
Weighting
|
Long-term
target range
|
Actual 2013 performance
|
Assessment
|
Outcome
|
||||
Return on equity (%)1 ..................
|
15%
|
12-15
|
9.8
|
0%
|
0%
|
||||
Cost efficiency ratio (%)1 ............
|
15%
|
48-52
|
58.5
|
0%
|
0%
|
||||
Capital strength (%)2 ...................
|
15%
|
>10
|
13.6
|
100%
|
15%
|
||||
Progressive dividend payout (%)...
|
15%
|
40-60
|
57.1
|
100%
|
15%
|
||||
Financial ......................................
|
60%
|
|
30%
|
||||||
Strategy execution .......................
|
20%
|
Judgement
|
n/a
|
80%
|
16%
|
||||
Compliance and reputation ..........
|
10%
|
Judgement
|
n/a
|
50%
|
5%
|
||||
Brand equity3 ...............................
|
5%
|
Top 3 rating and improved
US$ value
|
n/a
|
100%
|
5%
|
||||
People .........................................
|
5%
|
Judgement
|
n/a
|
80%
|
4%
|
||||
Non-financial ..............................
|
40%
|
30%
|
|||||||
Total performance outcome ........
|
100%
|
60%
|
|
1 Return on equity and cost efficiency ratio excludes from the return the impact of fair value movements on own debt designated at fair value resulting from changes in credit spreads.
|
|
2 Capital strength is defined as core tier 1 capital.
|
|
3 Based on results from The Brand Finance ® Banking 500 2014 survey.
|
· the increased level of confidence required to meet our strategic goals (99.95%); and
|
· internal assessments of diversification of risks within our portfolios and, similarly, any concentrations of risk that arise.
|
Details of our management of these risks may be found on the following pages of the
Annual Report and Accounts 2013:
liquidity and funding 213, structural foreign exchange 237, reputational 260 and sustainability 263.
|
|
At 31 December 2013
|
CRR prescribed residual amount
|
Final
CRD IV
text
|
|||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
|||
CET1 capital: instruments and reserves
|
|||||
Capital instruments and the related share premium accounts .........................
|
19,145
|
-
|
19,145
|
||
Retained earnings .........................................................................................
|
126,008
|
-
|
126,008
|
||
Accumulated other comprehensive income (and other reserves) ...................
|
19,189
|
-
|
19,189
|
||
Minority interests (amount allowed in consolidated CET1) ..........................
|
3,644
|
-
|
3,644
|
||
Independently reviewed interim net profits net of any foreseeable charge or dividend1 ..............................................................................................
|
(285)
|
-
|
(285)
|
||
CET1 capital before regulatory adjustments .................................................
|
167,701
|
-
|
167,701
|
||
CET1 capital: regulatory adjustments....................................................
|
(35,187)
|
-
|
(35,187)
|
||
Additional value adjustments ........................................................................
|
(2,006)
|
-
|
(2,006)
|
||
Intangible assets (net of related deferred tax liability) ...................................
|
(24,899)
|
-
|
(24,899)
|
||
Deferred tax assets that rely on future profitability excluding those arising from temporary differences (net of related tax liability) ...........................
|
(680)
|
-
|
(680)
|
||
Fair value reserves related to gains or losses on cash flow hedges ..................
|
121
|
-
|
121
|
||
Negative amounts resulting from the calculation of expected loss amounts ...
|
(5,976)
|
-
|
(5,976)
|
||
Gains or losses on liabilities valued at fair value resulting from changes in own
credit standing ..........................................................................................
|
661
|
-
|
661
|
||
Defined-benefit pension fund assets ..............................................................
|
(1,731)
|
-
|
(1,731)
|
||
Direct and indirect holdings of own CET1 instruments .................................
|
(677)
|
-
|
(677)
|
||
Regulatory adjustments applied to CET1 in respect of amounts subject to pre-CRR treatment
|
|||||
Regulatory adjustments relating to unrealised gains and losses .......................
|
(1,281)
|
1,281
|
-
|
||
of which: reserves arising from revaluation of property ............................
|
(1,281)
|
1,281
|
-
|
||
Total regulatory adjustments to CET1 .........................................................
|
(36,468)
|
1,281
|
(35,187)
|
||
CET1 capital
...............................................................................................
|
131,233
|
1,281
|
132,514
|
||
Additional Tier 1 ('AT1') capital: instruments
|
|||||
Amount of qualifying items and the related share premium accounts subject to phase out from AT1 .................................................................................
|
10,594
|
(10,594)
|
-
|
||
Qualifying tier 1 capital included in consolidated AT1 capital issued by subsidiaries and held by third parties ..........................................................
|
3,979
|
(3,614)
|
365
|
||
of which: instruments issued by subsidiaries subject to phase out ................
|
3,248
|
(3,248)
|
-
|
||
AT1 capital before regulatory adjustments ...................................................
|
14,573
|
(14,208)
|
365
|
||
Residual amounts deducted from Additional Tier 1 capital with regard to deduction from Tier 2 capital during the transitional period.......................
|
(165)
|
165
|
-
|
||
Regulatory adjustments to AT1 capital .........................................................
|
(165)
|
165
|
-
|
||
AT1 capital .................................................................................................
|
14,408
|
(14,043)
|
365
|
||
Tier 1 capital (T1 = CET1 + AT1)............................................................
|
145,641
|
(12,762)
|
132,879
|
||
At
31 December
2013
|
CRR prescribed
residual amount
|
Final
CRD IV
text
|
|||
US$m
|
US$m
|
US$m
|
|||
Tier 2 ('T2') capital: instruments and provisions
|
|||||
Capital instruments and the related share premium accounts .........................
|
11,729
|
-
|
11,729
|
||
Amount of qualifying items and the related share premium accounts subject to phase out from T2 ....................................................................................
|
7,593
|
(7,593)
|
-
|
||
Qualifying own funds instruments included in consolidated T2 capital issued by subsidiaries and held by third parties .....................................................
|
16,464
|
(16,033)
|
431
|
||
of which: instruments issued by subsidiaries subject to phase out ................
|
16,377
|
(16,377)
|
-
|
||
T2 capital before regulatory adjustments ......................................................
|
35,786
|
(23,626)
|
12,160
|
||
Direct and indirect holdings by the institution of the T2 instruments and subordinated loans of financial sector entities where the institution has a
significant investment in those entities (net of eligible short positions) (negative...................................................................................................
|
|||||
amount) ....................................................................................................
|
(248)
|
(165)
|
(413)
|
||
Regulatory adjustments to AT1 capital .........................................................
|
(248)
|
(165)
|
(413)
|
||
T2 capital....................................................................................................
|
35,538
|
(23,791)
|
11,747
|
||
Total capital (TC = T1 + T2)......................................................................
|
181,179
|
(36,553)
|
144,626
|
|
1 Following regulatory guidance, the prospective fourth interim dividend, net of projected scrip, has been deducted from the fourth interim profits.
|
· the scope of netting for derivatives and SFTs is extended to all scenarios where we would recognise a netting agreement for Basel II regulatory purposes, except for cross-product netting which is not permitted. For SFTs, only cash payables and receivables are netted and not securities provided or received;
|
· the inclusion of potential future exposure add-ons for both OTC and exchange-traded derivatives;
|
· off-balance sheet items are included in full except for commitments that are unconditionally cancellable at any time by HSBC without prior notice, where only 10% of the exposures are included;
|
· the exclusion of items deducted from the calculation of end-point tier 1 capital; and
|
· for investments in banking associates that are equity accounted in the financial accounting consolidation but proportionally consolidated for regulatory purposes, the accounting treatment is used.
|
|
Page in this document
|
Page(s) in
ARA
|
|
5
|
HSBC's implementation of EDTF recommendations...............................................................
|
131
|
8
|
RWA flow analysis ..................................................................................................................
|
302 and 303
|
9
|
Basis of consolidation for financial accounting purposes ..........................................................
|
430
|
12
|
The use of SPEs in the Group's securitisation programme .......................................................
|
550
|
14
|
Our approach to capital management ......................................................................................
|
319
|
14
|
A table of the movement in total regulatory capital during the year to 31 December 2013......
|
304
|
14
|
Main features of capital securities issued by the Group .............................................................
|
528, 529, 544 and 545
|
16
|
The Group's risk profile arising from the business activities of our global businesses ................
|
37
|
23
|
The Group's stress testing activities, areas of special interest and top and emerging risks ........
|
139, 147 and 141
|
24,26
|
Basis of preparation of the estimated effect of the CRD IV end point applied to the 31 December 2013 position .................................................................................................
|
324
|
29
|
Further details on the five main elements underpinning our risk culture ...................................
|
39
|
29
|
Risk governance structure and approach to risk appetite .........................................................
|
353 and 355
|
29
|
The risk appetite framework ...................................................................................................
|
354
|
31
|
Credit responsibilities of Global Risk ........................................................................................
|
266
|
44
|
Details of the Group's approach to credit quality classification ................................................
|
267
|
64
|
Details of the Group's impaired loans and advances, past due but not impaired assets and impairment allowances and charges ......................................................................................
|
172
|
64
|
Our approach for determining impairment allowances .............................................................
|
434
|
65
|
Collateral held over Residential and Commercial Real Estate properties ..................................
|
179
|
65
|
Information on CDS mitigants ................................................................................................
|
179
|
67
|
Information on credit risk mitigation ......................................................................................
|
178
|
70
|
Details of our estimated CVA risk capital charge .....................................................................
|
327
|
70
|
Credit derivative transactions ..................................................................................................
|
501
|
71
|
Net derivative credit exposure .................................................................................................
|
499
|
71
|
Derivatives offset in the 'Maximum Exposure to Credit Risk' table ..........................................
|
159
|
77
|
Entities used in securitisations .................................................................................................
|
550
|
77
|
Assessing control over SPEs ....................................................................................................
|
430
|
82
|
Further information on market risk .........................................................................................
|
230
|
82
|
Further information on VaR back-testing ................................................................................
|
233
|
85
|
Compliance and legal risks .......................................................................................................
|
37 and 554
|
85
|
Information on the possible historical mis-selling of PPI and interest rate protection products in the UK ................................................................................................................................
|
526
|
85
|
Further details relating to risk mitigating actions......................................................................
|
247
|
85
|
Operational risk - the 'Three lines of defence' model and our ORMF .....................................
|
244
|
87
|
The Group's monitoring of the sensitivity of projected net interest income under varying interest rate scenarios ..........................................................................................................
|
240
|
88
|
Accounting policy for AFS equity investments and valuation of financial instruments .............
|
439 and 433
|
88
|
Valuation techniques applied to private equity .........................................................................
|
487
|
94
|
Comparator group companies used for benchmarking of base salaries.......................................
|
388
|
100
|
Structural foreign exchange exposures .....................................................................................
|
237
|
100
|
Liquidity and funding, structural foreign exchange, reputational and sustainability risk .............
|
213, 237, 260, 263
|
103
|
Further information on the basis of preparation of CRD IV end point regulatory capital .........
|
324
|
103
|
Basis of preparation for estimated tier 1 capital figure based on an 'end point Basel III' definition of tier 1 capital applicable from 1 January 2022, applying the final CRD IV rules published in June 2013..........................................................................................................
|
324
|
Abbreviation
|
Brief description
|
A
|
|
ABS1
|
Asset-backed security
|
AFS1
|
Available for sale
|
AMA
|
Advanced Measurement Approach
|
AT1 capital
|
Additional Tier 1 capital
|
B
|
|
Basel Committee
|
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
|
BIPRU
|
Prudential Sourcebook for Banks, Building Societies and Investment Firms
|
BoCom
|
Bank of Communications Co., Limited, one of China's largest banks
|
C
|
|
CCB
|
Counter-cyclical capital buffer
|
CCP
|
Central counterparty
|
CCF1
|
Credit conversion factor
|
CCR1
|
Counterparty credit risk
|
CCAR1
|
Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review
|
CDS1
|
Credit default swap
|
CET11
|
Common equity tier 1
|
CML
|
Consumer and Mortgage Lending (US)
|
CPB
1
|
Capital planning buffer
|
CRD1
|
Capital Requirements Directive
|
CRE1
|
Commercial real estate
|
CRM1
|
Comprehensive risk measure
|
CRR1
|
Customer risk rating
|
CSA1
|
Credit Support Annex
|
CVA1
|
Credit valuation adjustment
|
E
|
|
EAD1
|
Exposure at default
|
EBA
|
European Banking Authority
|
ECAI1
|
External Credit Assessment Institutions
|
EDTF
|
Enhanced Disclosure Task Force
|
EEA
|
European Economic Area
|
EL1
|
Expected loss
|
EU
|
European Union
|
EVE1
|
Economic value of equity
|
F
|
|
FCA1
|
Financial Conduct Authority (UK)
|
FCCM1
|
Financial collateral comprehensive method
|
Fitch
|
Fitch Group
|
FPC1
|
Financial Policy Committee (UK)
|
G
|
|
GB&M
|
Global Banking and Markets, a global business
|
GCRO
|
Group Chief Risk Officer.
|
GENPRU
|
The PRA's rules, as set out in the General Prudential Sourcebook.
|
GMB
|
Group Management Board
|
GPB
|
Global Private Banking, a global business
|
GPSP
|
Group Performance Share Plan
|
GRC
|
Group Risk Committee
|
Group
|
HSBC Holdings together with its subsidiary undertakings
|
G-SIB1
|
Global systemically important bank
|
GSE1
|
Government-sponsored enterprises
|
H
|
|
HBUS
|
HSBC Bank USA NA
|
HNAH
|
HSBC North America Holdings Inc.
|
Hong Kong
|
The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China
|
HSBC
|
HSBC Holdings together with its subsidiary undertakings
|
Abbreviation
|
Brief description
|
I
|
|
IAA
1
|
Internal Assessment Approach
|
ICAAP
1
|
Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process
|
IFRSs
|
International Financial Reporting Standards
|
IMM
1
|
Internal Model Method
|
IRB
1
|
Internal ratings-based approach
|
IRC1
|
Incremental risk charge
|
ISDA
|
International Swaps and Derivatives Association
|
L
|
|
LGD1
|
Loss given default
|
Libor
|
London Interbank Offer Rate
|
M
|
|
MENA
|
Middle East and North Africa
|
MOC
|
Model Oversight Committee
|
Moody's
|
Moody's Investor Service
|
O
|
|
OIS
|
Overnight Index Swap
|
ORMF
|
Operational risk management framework
|
OTC1
|
Over-the-counter
|
P
|
|
PD1
|
Probability of default
|
PIT1
|
Point-in-time
|
PPI
|
Payment protection insurance product
|
PRA1
|
Prudential Regulation Authority (UK)
|
PVA1
|
Prudent valuation adjustment
|
PVIF
|
Present value of in-force long-term insurance business
|
R
|
|
RBM1
|
Ratings Based Method
|
Retail IRB1
|
Retail Internal Ratings Based approach
|
RMM
|
Risk Management Meeting
|
RNIV
|
Risks not in VaR
|
RTS
|
Regulatory Technical Standard
|
RWA1
|
Risk-weighted asset
|
S
|
|
S&P
|
Standard and Poor's rating agency
|
SFM1
|
Supervisory Formula Method
|
SFT1
|
Securities Financing Transactions
|
SIC
|
Securities Investment Conduit
|
SME
|
Small and medium-sized enterprise
|
SPE1
|
Special Purpose Entity
|
STD1
|
Standardised approach
|
T
|
|
TTC
1
|
Through-the-cycle
|
T2 capital
|
Tier 2 capital
|
U
|
|
UK
|
United Kingdom
|
US$
|
United States dollar
|
US
|
United States of America
|
V
|
|
VaR1
|
Value at risk
|
|
1 Full definition included in Glossary on page 107.
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
A
|
||
Additional value adjustment
|
See 'Prudent valuation adjustment'.
|
|
Arrears
|
Customers are said to be in arrears (or in a state of delinquency) when they are behind in fulfilling their obligations, with the result that an outstanding loan is unpaid or overdue. When a customer is in arrears, the total outstanding loans on which payments are overdue are described as delinquent.
|
|
Asset-backed securities ('ABS's)
|
Securities that represent an interest in an underlying pool of referenced assets. The referenced pool can comprise any assets which attract a set of associated cash flows but are commonly pools of residential or commercial mortgages.
|
|
Available-for-sale ('AFS') financial assets
|
Those non-derivative financial assets that are designated as available for sale or are not classified as a) loans and receivables b) held-to-maturity investments or c) financial assets at fair value through profit or loss.
|
|
B
|
||
Back-testing
|
A statistical technique used to monitor and assess the accuracy of a model, and how that model would have performed had it been applied in the past.
|
|
Basel II
|
The capital adequacy framework issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision in June 2006 in the form of the 'International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards'.
|
|
Basel 2.5
|
The update to Basel II including changes to capital and disclosure requirements for securitisation and market risk, which took effect in December 2011.
|
|
Basel III
|
In December 2010, the Basel Committee issued 'Basel III rules: a global regulatory framework for more resilient banks and banking systems' and 'International framework for liquidity risk measurement, standards and monitoring'. Together these documents present the Basel Committee's reforms to strengthen global capital and liquidity rules with the goal of promoting a more resilient banking sector. In June 2011, the Basel Committee issued a revision to the former document setting out the finalised capital treatment for counterparty credit risk in bilateral trades. The Basel III requirements will be phased in with full implementation by 1 January 2019.
|
|
Basis risk
|
The risk that prices of offsetting financial instruments in a hedging strategy will not move in entirely opposite directions from each other. There is therefore a risk that the imperfect correlation between the instruments used for the hedging strategy produces an overall gain or loss.
|
|
BIPRU
|
Prudential sourcebook for Banks, Building Societies and Investment Firms
|
|
C
|
||
Capital conservation buffer
|
A capital buffer, prescribed by regulators under Basel III, and designed to ensure banks build up capital buffers outside periods of stress which can be drawn down as losses are incurred. Should a bank's capital levels fall within the capital conservation buffer range, capital distributions will be constrained by the regulators.
|
|
Capital planning buffer ('CPB')
|
A capital buffer, prescribed by the PRA under Basel II, and designed to ensure banks build up capital buffers outside periods of stress which can be drawn down as losses are incurred. Should a bank's capital levels fall within the capital planning buffer range, a period of heightened regulatory interaction would be triggered.
|
|
Capital required
|
Capital required represents the Pillar 1 capital charge calculated at 8% of RWAs.
|
|
Capital requirements directive ('CRD')
|
A capital adequacy legislative package issued by the European Commission and adopted by EU member states. The first CRD legislative package gave effect to the Basel II proposals in the EU and came into force on 20 July 2006. CRD II, which came into force on 31 December 2010, subsequently updated the requirements for capital instruments, large exposure, liquidity risk and securitisation. A further CRD III amendment updated market risk capital and additional securitisation requirements and came into force on 31 December 2011.
CRD IV package comprises a recast Capital Requirements Directive and a new Capital Requirements Regulation. The package implements the Basel III capital proposals together with transitional arrangements for some of its requirements. CRD IV proposals came into force on 1 January 2014.
|
|
Capital resources
|
Capital held on balance sheet that is eligible to satisfy capital requirements.
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Code Staff
|
Senior management, risk takers, staff engaged in control functions, and any employee whose total remuneration takes them into the same remuneration bracket as senior management and risk takers and whose professional activities have a material impact on the firm's risk profile.
|
|
Commercial paper ('CP')
|
An unsecured, short-term debt instrument issued by a corporation, typically for the financing of accounts receivable, inventories and meeting short-term liabilities. The debt is usually issued at a discount, reflecting prevailing market interest rates.
|
|
Commercial real estate
|
Any real estate, comprising buildings or land, intended to generate a profit, either from capital gain or rental income.
|
|
Common equity tier 1 capital ('CET1')
|
The highest quality form of regulatory capital under Basel III that comprises common shares issued and related share premium, retained earnings and other reserves excluding the cash flow hedging reserve, less specified regulatory adjustments.
|
|
CET 1 ratio
|
A Basel III measure, of CET 1 capital expressed as percentage of total risk exposure amount.
|
|
Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review ('CCAR')
|
The Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR) is an annual exercise by the Federal Reserve to ensure that institutions have robust, forward-looking capital planning processes that account for their unique risks and sufficient capital to continue operations throughout times of economic and financial stress.
|
|
Comprehensive risk measure
('CRM')
|
The comprehensive risk measure model covers all positions that are part of the correlation trading portfolio. Comprehensive risk measure covers all price risks including spread, default and migration. Like incremental risk charge, it is calibrated to a 99.9 percentile loss and a one-year capital horizon to generate a capital add-on to VAR.
|
|
Conduits
|
HSBC sponsors and manages multi-seller conduits and SICs. The multi-seller conduits hold interests in diversified pools of third-party assets such as vehicle loans, trade receivables and credit card receivables funded through the issuance of short-dated commercial paper and supported by a liquidity facility. The SICs hold predominantly asset-backed securities referencing such items as commercial and residential mortgages, vehicle loans and credit card receivables funded through the issuance of both long-term and short-term debt.
|
|
Consumer and Mortgage Lending
('CML')
|
In the US, the CML portfolio consists of our Consumer Lending and Mortgage Services businesses, which are in run-off.
The Consumer Lending business offered secured and unsecured loan products, such as first and second lien mortgage loans, open-ended home equity loans and personal non-credit card loans through branch locations and direct mail. The majority of the mortgage lending products were for refinancing and debt consolidation rather than home purchases. In the first quarter of 2009, we discontinued all originations by our Consumer Lending business.
Prior to the first quarter of 2007, when we ceased loan purchase activity, the Mortgage Services business purchased non-conforming first and second lien real estate secured loans from unaffiliated third parties. The business also included the operations of Decision One Mortgage Company ('Decision One'), which historically originated mortgage loans sourced by independent mortgage brokers and sold these to secondary market purchasers. Decision One ceased originations in September 2007.
|
|
Core tier 1 capital
|
The highest quality form of regulatory capital under Basel II that comprises total shareholders' equity and related non-controlling interests, less goodwill and intangible assets and certain other regulatory adjustments.
|
|
Core tier 1 ratio
|
A Basel II measure, of core tier 1 capital expressed as a percentage of the total risk-weighted assets.
|
|
Countercyclical capital buffer ('CCB')
|
A capital buffer, prescribed by regulators under Basel III, which aims to ensure that capital requirements take account of the macro-financial environment in which banks operate. This will provide the banking sector with additional capital to protect it against potential future losses, when excess credit growth in the financial system as a whole is associated with an increase in system-wide risk.
|
|
Counterparty credit risk ('CCR')
|
Counterparty credit risk, in both the trading and non-trading books, is the risk that the counterparty to a transaction may default before completing the satisfactory settlement of the transaction.
|
|
CRD III
|
See 'Capital requirements directive'.
|
|
CRD IV
|
See 'Capital requirements directive'.
|
|
Credit Conversion Factor ('CCF')
|
CCFs are used in determining the EAD in relation to credit risk exposures. The CCF is an estimate of the proportion of undrawn commitments expected to have been drawn down at the point of default.
|
|
Credit default swap ('CDS')
|
A derivative contract whereby a buyer pays a fee to a seller in return for receiving a payment in the event of a defined credit event (e.g. bankruptcy, payment default on a reference asset or assets, or downgrades by a rating agency) on an underlying obligation (which may or may not be held by the buyer).
|
|
Credit enhancements
|
Facilities used to enhance the creditworthiness of financial obligations and cover losses due to asset default.
|
Term
|
Definition
|
||
Credit quality step
|
A step in the PRA credit quality assessment scale which is based on the credit ratings of ECAIs. It is used to assign risk weights under the standardised approach.
|
||
Credit risk
|
Risk of financial loss if a customer or counterparty fails to meet an obligation under a contract. It arises mainly from direct lending, trade finance and leasing business, but also from products such as guarantees, derivatives and debt securities.
|
||
Credit risk mitigation
|
A technique to reduce the credit risk associated with an exposure by application of credit risk mitigants such as collateral, guarantees and credit protection.
|
||
Credit spread option
|
A derivative that transfers risk from one party to another. The buyer pays an initial premium in exchange for potential cash flows if the credit spread changes from its current level.
|
||
Credit Support Annex ('CSA')
|
A legal document that regulates credit support (collateral) for OTC derivative transactions between two parties.
|
||
Customer risk rating ('CRR')
|
An internal scale of 23 grades measuring obligor PD.
|
||
CVA risk capital charge
|
A capital charge under CRD IV to cover the risk of mark-to-market losses on expected counterparty risk to derivatives.
|
||
D
|
|||
Debit valuation adjustment ('DVA')
|
An adjustment made by an entity to the valuation of OTC derivative liabilities to reflect within fair value the entity's own credit risk.
|
||
Debt securities
|
Financial assets on the Group's balance sheet representing certificates of indebtedness of credit institutions, public bodies or other undertakings, excluding those issued by central banks.
|
||
Delinquency
|
See 'Arrears'.
|
||
E
|
|||
Economic capital
|
The internally calculated capital requirement which is deemed necessary by HSBC to support the risks to which it is exposed.
|
||
Economic Value of Equity ('EVE')
|
Considers all re-pricing mismatches in the current balance sheet and calculates the change in market value that would result from a set of defined interest rate shocks.
|
||
Equity risk
|
The risk arising from positions, either long or short, in equities or equity-based instruments, which create exposure to a change in the market price of the equities or equity instruments.
|
||
Expected loss ('EL')
|
A regulatory calculation of the amount expected to be lost on an exposure using a 12-month time horizon and downturn loss estimates. EL is calculated by multiplying the PD (a percentage) by the EAD (an amount) and LGD (a percentage).
|
||
Exposure
|
A claim, contingent claim or position which carries a risk of financial loss.
|
||
Exposure at default ('EAD')
|
The amount expected to be outstanding after any credit risk mitigation, if and when the counterparty defaults. EAD reflects drawn balances as well as allowance for undrawn amounts of commitments and contingent exposures.
|
||
Exposure value
|
Exposure at default.
|
||
External Credit Assessment Institutions ('ECAI')
|
ECAIs include external credit rating agencies such as Standard & Poor's, Moody's and Fitch.
|
||
F
|
|||
Fair value
|
Fair value is the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date.
|
||
Financial collateral comprehensive
method
|
This method applies a volatility adjustment (or 'haircut') to the value of the collateral to allow for the fact that the collateral taken may fall in value when it comes to taking control of the collateral and selling it. This adjusted collateral value is then subtracted from the exposure to create an 'adjusted exposure'. Firms on the standardised approach will then apply the risk weight of the borrower to the adjusted exposure value, while firms using foundation IRB make a formulaic adjustment to the LGD number which has a similar effect. To calculate these 'haircuts', the firm can use either a table of supervisory numbers or its own numbers if it meets certain requirements.
|
||
Financial Conduct Authority ('FCA')
|
The Financial Conduct Authority regulates the conduct of financial firms and, for certain firms, prudential standards in the UK. It has a strategic objective to ensure that the relevant markets function well.
|
||
Financial Policy Committee ('FPC')
|
The Financial Policy Committee, at the Bank of England, is charged with a primary objective of identifying, monitoring and taking action to remove or reduce systemic risks with a view to protecting and enhancing the resilience of the UK financial system. The FPC has a secondary objective to support the economic policy of the UK Government.
|
||
Firm Data Submission Framework
|
A comprehensive framework for the submission of the data by banks to the PRA for the purpose of conducting stress tests. Over the past two years it has been designed and implemented by the PRA (and before that the FSA) in collaboration with a number of large UK banks.
|
||
Term
|
Definition
|
G
|
|
Global
Systemically Important Bank
('G-SIB')
|
In parallel with the Basel III proposals, the Basel Committee issued in July 2011 a consultative document: 'Global systemically important banks: assessment methodology and the additional loss absorbency requirement', and in November 2011, its first rules on G-SIBs. The Financial Stability Board ('FSB') periodically issues the list of G-SIBs, which currently includes HSBC and 28 other major banks from around the world and is re-assessed through annual re-scoring of the individual banks and a triennial review of the methodology.
|
The requirements, initially for those banks identified in November 2014 as G-SIBs, will be phased in from 1 January 2016, becoming fully effective on 1 January 2019. National regulators have discretion to introduce higher thresholds than the minima. In November 2013, the FSB published a revised list of G-SIBs and their current assessment of the appropriate capital charge. HSBC was assigned an add-on of 2.5%.
|
|
Government-sponsored enterprises ('GSEs')
|
A group of financial services enterprises created by the US Congress to reduce the cost of capital for certain borrowing sectors of the economy, and to make them more efficient and transparent. Examples in the residential mortgage borrowing segment are Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. GSEs carry the implicit backing, but are not direct obligations, of the US Government.
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H
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Haircut
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A discount applied by management when determining the amount at which an asset can be realised. The discount takes into account the method of realisation including the extent to which an active market for the asset exists.
With respect to credit risk mitigation, a downward adjustment to collateral value to reflect any currency or maturity mismatches between the credit risk mitigant and the underlying exposure to which it is being applied. Also a
valuation adjustment to reflect any fall in value between the date the collateral was called and the date of liquidation or enforcement.
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Held-to-maturity
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An accounting classification for investments acquired with the intention and ability of being held until they mature.
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I
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Impaired loans
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Loans where the Group does not expect to collect all the contractual cash flows or expects to collect them later than they are contractually due.
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Impairment allowances
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Management's best estimate of losses incurred in the loan portfolios at the balance sheet date.
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Impairment charge
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Impairment charges represent a movement in the impairment allowance balance during the year, reflecting loss events which occurred during the financial year and changes in estimates of losses arising on events which occurred prior to the current year.
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Incremental risk charge ('IRC')
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The IRC model captures the potential distribution of profit and loss due to default and migration for a portfolio of credit positions. For credit positions held on the trading book, and subject to specific interest rate risk VAR for regulatory capital, an IRC based on the 99.9th percentile of the IRC distribution, over a one-year capital horizon, is used as a capital add-on to VAR.
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Institutions
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Under the standardised approach, Institutions comprise credit institutions or investment firms. Under the IRB approach, Institutions also include regional governments and local authorities, public sector entities and multilateral development banks.
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Insurance risk
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A risk, other than financial risk, transferred from the holder of a contract to the insurance provider.
The principal insurance risk is that, over time, the combined cost of claims, administration and acquisition of the contract may exceed the aggregate amount of premiums received and investment income.
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Interest rate risk ('IRR')
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Exposure to adverse movements in interest rates. Accepting this risk is a normal part of banking and can be an important source of profitability and shareholder value.
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Internal Assessment Approach ('IAA')
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One of three calculation methods defined under the IRB approach to securitisations. The IAA is limited to exposures arising from asset-backed commercial paper programmes, mainly related to liquidity facilities and credit enhancement. Eligible ECAI rating methodology is applied to each asset class in order to derive the equivalent rating level for each transaction. This methodology is verified by the internal Credit function as part of the approval process for each new transaction. The performance of each underlying asset portfolio is monitored to confirm that the applicable equivalent rating level still applies and is independently verified.
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Term
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Definition
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Internal Capital Adequacy
Assessment Process ('ICAAP')
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The Group's own assessment of the levels of capital that it needs to hold through an e
xamination of its risk profile from regulatory and economic capital viewpoints.
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Internal Model Method ('IMM')
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One of three approaches defined by Basel II to determine exposure values for counterparty credit risk.
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Internal ratings-based approach ('IRB')
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A method of calculating credit risk capital requirements using internal, rather than supervisory, estimates of risk parameters.
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Invested capital
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Equity capital invested in HSBC by its shareholders, adjusted for certain reserves and goodwill previously amortised or written off.
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IRB advanced approach ('AIRB')
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A method of calculating credit risk capital requirements using internal PD, LGD and EAD models.
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IRB foundation approach ('FIRB')
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A method of calculating credit risk capital requirements using internal PD models but with supervisory estimates of LGD and conversion factors for the calculation of EAD.
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ISDA
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International Swaps and Derivatives Association.
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ISDA Master agreement
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Standardised contract developed by ISDA used as an umbrella contract under which bilateral derivatives contracts are entered into.
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L
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Leverage ratio
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A measure, prescribed by regulators under Basel III, which is the ratio of tier 1 capital to total exposures. Total exposures include on-balance sheet items, off-balance sheet items and derivatives, and should generally follow the accounting measure of exposure. This supplementary measure to the risk-based capital requirements is intended to constrain the build-up of excess leverage in the banking sector.
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Liquidity risk
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The risk that HSBC does not have sufficient financial resources to meet its obligations as they fall due, or will have to do so at an excessive cost. This risk arises from mismatches in the timing of cash flows.
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Loss given default ('LGD')
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The estimated ratio (percentage) of the loss on an exposure to the amount outstanding at default (EAD) upon default of a counterparty.
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M
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Market risk
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The risk that movements in market risk factors, including foreign exchange rates and commodity prices, interest rates, credit spreads and equity prices will reduce income or portfolio values.
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Mark-to-market approach
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One of three approaches defined by Basel II to determine exposure values for counterparty credit risk.
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Minimum capital requirement
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The minimum amount of regulatory capital that a financial institution must hold to meet the Pillar 1 requirements for credit, market and operational risk. Also see 'capital required'.
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Model validation
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The process of assessing how well a credit risk model performs using a predefined set of criteria including the discriminatory power of the model, the appropriateness of the inputs, and expert opinion.
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Multilateral Development Bank
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An institution created by a group of countries to provide financing for the purpose of development. Under the standardised approach to credit risk, eligible multilateral development banks attract a zero per cent risk weight.
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N
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Net interest income
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The amount of interest received or receivable on assets net of interest paid or payable on liabilities.
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O
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Obligor grade
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Obligor grades, summarising a more granular underlying counterparty risk rating scale for estimates of PD, are defined as follows:
· 'Minimal Default Risk': The strongest credit risk, with a negligible PD.
· 'Low Default Risk': A strong credit risk, with a low PD.
· 'Satisfactory Default Risk': A good credit risk, with a satisfactory PD.
· 'Fair Default Risk': The risk of default remains fair, but identified weaknesses may warrant more regular monitoring.
· 'Moderate Default Risk': The overall position will not be causing any immediate concern, but more regular monitoring will be necessary as a result of sensitivities to external events that give rise to the possibility of risk of default increasing.
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Term
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Definition
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Obligor grade
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· 'Significant Default Risk': Performance may be limited by one or more troublesome aspects, known deterioration, or the prospect of worsening
financial status. More regular monitoring required.
· 'High Default Risk': Continued deterioration in financial status, that requires frequent monitoring and ongoing assessment. The PD is of concern but the borrower currently has the capacity to meet its financial commitments.
· 'Special Management': The PD is of increasing concern and the borrower's capacity to fully meet its financial commitments is becoming increasingly less likely.
· 'Default': A default is considered to have occurred with regard to a particular obligor when either or both of the following events has taken place: the Group considers that the obligor is unlikely to pay its credit obligations in full, without recourse by the Group to actions such as realising security; or the obligor is past due more than 90 days, (90 days to 180 days for retail), on any material credit obligation to the Group.
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Operational risk
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The risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people and systems, or from external events, including legal risk.
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Over-the-counter ('OTC')
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A bilateral transaction (e.g. derivatives) that is not exchange traded and that is valued using valuation models.
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P
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Past due items
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'Past due items' is an exposure class under the standardised approach to credit risk. A financial asset falls into this exposure class once it is more than 90 days past due. A financial asset such as a loan is past due when the counterparty has failed to make a payment when contractually due.
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Pillar 1
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Minimum capital requirements - the part of the Basel Accord setting out the calculation of regulatory capital for credit, market, and operational risk.
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Pillar 2
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The supervisory review process - the part of the Basel Accord which sets out the process by which a bank should review its overall capital adequacy and the processes under which the supervisors evaluate how well financial institutions are assessing their risks and take appropriate actions in response to the assessments.
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Pillar 3
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Market discipline - the part of the Basel Accord, which sets out the disclosure requirements for banks to publish certain details of their risks, capital and risk management, with the aim of strengthening market discipline.
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Point-in-time ('PIT')
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Estimates of PD (or other measures) generally covering a short time horizon (usually a 12-month period) and that are sensitive to changes in the economic cycle. This differs from a TTC basis which uses long run average economic and risk data to reduce such sensitivity.
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Potential Future Exposure ('PFE')
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The potential future credit exposure on derivatives contracts, calculated using the mark-to-market approach.
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Prudential Regulation Authority ('PRA')
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The Prudential Regulation Authority in the UK is responsible for prudential regulation and supervision of banks, building societies, credit unions, insurers and major investment firms.
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PRA Standard rules
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The method prescribed by the PRA for calculating market risk capital requirements in the absence of VAR model approval.
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Present value of in-force long-term insurance business ('PVIF')
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An asset representing the present value of the equity holders' interest in the issuing insurance companies' profits, expected to emerge from long-term insurance business or long-term investment contracts with discretionary participating features ('DPF'), written at the balance sheet date.
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Private equity investments
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Equity securities in operating companies not quoted on a public exchange, often involving the investment of capital in private companies or the acquisition of a public company that results in its delisting.
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Probability of default ('PD')
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The probability that an obligor will default within one year.
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Prudent Valuation Adjustment ('PVA')
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A deduction from common equity tier 1 capital where the prudent value of trading assets or other financial assets measured at fair value is materially lower than the fair value recognised in the financial statements.
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Q
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Qualifying revolving retail exposures
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Retail IRB exposures that are revolving, unsecured, and, to the extent they are not drawn, immediately and unconditionally cancellable, such as credit cards.
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R
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Ratings Based Method ('RBM')
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One of three calculation methods defined under the IRB approach to securitisations. The approach uses risk weightings based on ECAI ratings, the granularity of the underlying pool and the seniority of the position and whether it is a re-securitisation.
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Term
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Definition
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Reference PD
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HSBC's master CRR scale has been constructed using a set of PD points, falling at regular intervals along an exponential PD curve and determining the boundaries of 23 CRR bands. Reference PDs have been determined, which for most bands fall mid-way between that band's boundary PD points. The determination of the bands and corresponding reference PDs takes into account the need to avoid concentration in any one band, and to ensure effective mapping to risk management portfolio quality scales.
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Regulatory capital
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The capital which HSBC holds, determined in accordance with rules established by the PRA for the consolidated Group and by local regulators for individual Group companies.
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Repo/reverse repo
(or sale and repurchase agreement)
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A short-term funding agreement that allows a borrower to create a collateralised loan by selling a financial asset to a lender. As part of the agreement the borrower commits to repurchase the security at a date in the future repaying the proceeds of the loan. For the party on the other end of the transaction (buying the security and agreeing to sell in the future) it is a reverse repurchase agreement or a reverse repo.
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Re-securitisation
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A securitisation of a securitisation exposure, where the risk associated with an underlying pool of exposures is tranched and at least one of the underlying exposures is a securitisation exposure.
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Residential Mortgaged Backed Securities ('RMBSs')
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A type of security whose cash flows come from residential debt such as mortgages, home-equity loans and subprime mortgages.
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Residual maturity
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The period outstanding from the reporting date to the maturity or end date of an exposure.
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Restricted Shares
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Awards that define the number of HSBC Holdings ordinary shares to which the employee will become entitled, generally between one and three years from the date of the award, and normally subject to the individual remaining in employment. The shares to which the employee becomes entitled may be subject to retention requirement.
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Retail Internal Ratings Based ('Retail IRB') approach
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Retail exposures that are treated under the IRB approach.
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Return on equity
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Profit attributable to ordinary shareholders of the parent company divided by average ordinary shareholders' equity.
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Risk appetite
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The aggregate level and types of risk a firm is willing to assume within its risk capacity to achieve its strategic objectives and business plan.
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Risk-weighted assets ('RWAs')
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Calculated by assigning a degree of risk expressed as a percentage (risk weight) to an exposure value in accordance with the applicable Standardised or IRB approach rules.
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RMM
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Risk Management Meeting of the GMB.
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Run-off portfolios
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Legacy credit in GB&M, the US CML portfolio and other US run-off portfolios, including the treasury services related to the US CML businesses and commercial operations in run-off. Origination of new business in the run-off portfolios has been discontinued and balances are being managed down through attrition and sale.
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RWA density
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The average risk weight, expressed as a percentage of RWAs divided by exposure value, based on those RWA and exposure value numbers before they are rounded to the nearest US$0.1bn for presentation purposes.
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S
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Securitisation
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A transaction or scheme whereby the credit risk associated with an exposure, or pool of exposures, is tranched and where payments to investors in the transaction or scheme are dependent upon the performance of the exposure or pool of exposures. A traditional securitisation involves the transfer of the exposures being securitised to an SPE which issues securities. In a synthetic securitisation, the tranching is achieved by the use of credit derivatives and the exposures are not removed from the balance sheet of the originator.
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Securitisation position
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Securitisation position means an exposure to a securitisation.
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Securities Financing Transactions ('SFT')
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The act of loaning a stock, derivative, or other security to an investor or firm.
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Significant Influence Function
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PRA registered role, recognised as being a control function role.
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Six filters
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An internal measure designed to improve capital deployment across the Group. Five of the filters examine the strategic relevance of each business in each country, in terms of connectivity and economic development, and the current returns, in terms of profitability, cost efficiency and liquidity. The sixth filter requires adherence to global risk standards.
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Sovereign exposures
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Exposures to governments, ministries, departments of governments, embassies, consulates and exposures on account of cash balances and deposits with central banks.
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Specialised lending exposure
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Specialisedlending exposures are defined by the PRA as exposures to an entity which was created specifically to finance and/or operate physical assets, where the contractual arrangements give the lender a substantial degree of control over the assets and the income that they generate and the primary source of repayment of the obligation is the income generated by the assets being financed, rather than the independent capacity of a broader commercial enterprise.
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Term
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Definition
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Specific issuer risk
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Specific issuer (credit spread) risk arises from a change in the value of debt instruments due to a perceived change in the credit quality of the issuer or underlying assets.
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Standardised approach ('STD')
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In relation to credit risk, a method for calculating credit risk capital requirements using ECAI ratings and supervisory risk weights.
In relation to operational risk, a method of calculating the operational capital requirement by the application of a supervisory defined percentage charge to the gross income of eight specified business lines.
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Stressed VaR
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A market risk measure based on potential market movements for a continuous one-year period of stress for a trading portfolio.
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Special Purpose Entity ('SPE')
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A corporation, trust or other non-bank entity, established for a narrowly defined purpose, including for carrying on securitisation activities. The structure of the SPE and its activities are intended to isolate its obligations from those of the originator and the holders of the beneficial interests in the securitisation.
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Subordinated liabilities
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Liabilities which rank after the claims of other creditors of the issuer in the event of insolvency or liquidation.
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Supervisory Formula Method ('SFM')
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An alternative Ratings Based Method to be used primarily on sponsored securitisations. It is used to calculate the capital requirements of exposures to a securitisation as a function of the collateral pool and contractual properties of the tranche or tranches retained.
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Supervisory slotting approach
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A method for calculating capital requirements for Specialised lending exposures where the internal rating of the obligor is mapped to one of five supervisory categories, each associated with a specific supervisory risk weight.
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T
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Through-the-cycle ('TTC')
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A rating methodology which seeks to take cyclical volatility out of the estimation of default risk by assessing a borrower's performance over the business cycle.
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Tier 1 capital
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A component of regulatory capital, comprising core tier 1 capital and other tier 1 capital. Other tier 1 capital includes qualifying capital instruments such as non-cumulative perpetual preference shares and hybrid capital securities.
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Tier 1 capital ratio
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The ratio expresses tier 1 capital as a percentage of risk-weighted assets.
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Tier 2 capital
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A component of regulatory capital, comprising qualifying subordinated loan capital, related non-controlling interests, allowable collective impairment allowances and unrealised gains arising on the fair valuation of equity instruments held as available-for-sale. Tier 2 capital also includes reserves arising from the revaluation of properties.
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Total return swap
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A credit derivative transaction that swaps the total return on a financial instrument (cash flows and capital gains and losses), for a guaranteed interest rate, such as an inter-bank rate, plus a margin.
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Trading book
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Positions in financial instruments and commodities held either with intent to trade or in order to hedge other elements of the trading book. To be eligible for trading book capital treatment, financial instruments must either be free of any restrictive covenants on their tradability or able to be hedged completely.
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V
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Value at risk ('VaR')
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A measure of the loss that could occur on risk positions as a result of adverse movements in market risk factors (e.g. rates, prices, volatilities) over a specified time horizon and to a given level of confidence.
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W
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Write-down/write-off
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When a financial asset is written down or written off, a customer balance is partially or fully removed, respectively, from the balance sheet. Loans (and related impairment allowance accounts) are normally written off, either partially or in full, when there is no realistic prospect of recovery. Where loans are secured, this is generally after receipt of any proceeds from the realisation of security. In circumstances where the net realisable value of any collateral has been determined and there is no reasonable expectation of further recovery, write-off may be earlier.
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Wrong-way risk
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An adverse correlation between the counterparty's PD and the mark-to-market value of the underlying transaction.
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