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A
report by global independent research and advisory firm Financial
Insights discusses the payoffs of Basel II compliance and quantifies
the corresponding dollar spend on IT systems and interfaces in Asia.
Entitled ‘Basel II, Chapter 1: The Cost of Compliance in Asia/Pacific’,
the report also analyses some strategic considerations that provide
the impetus for software solutions vendor selection.
“The allure of the Basel II accord is multifaceted, having
evolved from a single, simplified step into a comprehensive program
for risk improvement. Tenets of superior risk management include
processes for risk identification, assessment of threats to solvency
posed by the risks uncovered, and the discipline to manage the risks
to prevent them from rising unduly high,” comments Li-May
Chew, CFA and senior research manager for Financial Insights' Asia/Pacific
Capital Markets Advisory Service.
Financial Insights believes that beyond just expectations of improvements
in regulatory capital ratios, Basel II-conforming banks can expect
to enjoy substantial operational benefits from more robust, risk-based
pricing and economically rational capital allocation.
However, considerable uncertainty remains on the cost of compliance
in Asian institutions. “In our recent interviews with banks,
a number of players were unable to quantify the cost of their Basel
II programs. However, guidelines by some large local banks indicated
that they expect to spend in the region of US$30-60 million each
in their compliance efforts,” stated Li-May.
Rough estimates of the aggregated cost for banks in the 12 Asia/Pacific
countries for implementing their new Basel II framework is US$9.2
billion for the 5 years from 2002 to 2006, or 10–13 percent
of their IT spend. Of that sum, more than half will be spent on
IT systems and interfaces. The other half resides in the collection,
collation, and cleansing of historical data to ensure consistency
and to eliminate errors and duplication. Much of this has to be
done in a manual, tedious manner.
Generally, banks that are building a single solution set and rationalising
systems would be the lower spenders, while the those with higher
expenditures are investing on design, specification, coding, and
testing of dissimilar solutions for each of their multiple business
divisions, such as the commercial, retail, and SME operations.
With such a massive financial investment, institutions need to
ensure appropriate vendor selection, smooth integration of new solutions
with their existing IT infrastructure, and adopt relevant tools
to assist reporting functionalities and provide robust capital calculation,
data capture, and cleansing. The technical architecture must build
enough flexibility to incorporate evolution and keep its relevance
over the years.
“While compliance will be challenging and necessitates substantial
investments, rather than being an onerous regulatory burden, Basel
II represents a significant opportunity for institutions to enhance
risk management processes and models. Banks that seek wholehearted
adoption will command competitive advantage over those who seek
mere regulatory compliance,” concluded Li-May.
For more information on obtaining this report please contact Selina
Ang at sang@idc.com or +65-6228-7717.

•Date:
26th Nov 2004 • Region: Asia Pacific •Type:
Article •Topic: Operational
risk
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