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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (28731)1/28/2008 10:59:44 PM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217773
 
Basel II is the second of the Basel Accords, which are recommendations on banking laws and regulations issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. The purpose of Basel II, which initially was published in June 2004, is to create an international standard that banking regulators can use when creating regulations about how much capital banks need to put aside to guard against the types of financial and operational risks banks face. Advocates of Basel II believe that such an international standard can help protect the international financial system from the types of problems that might arise should a major bank or a series of banks collapse. In practice, Basel II attempts to accomplish this by setting up rigorous risk and capital management requirements designed to ensure that a bank holds capital reserves appropriate to the risk the bank exposes itself to through its lending and investment practices. Generally speaking, these rules mean that the greater risk to which the bank is exposed, the greater the amount of capital the bank needs to hold to safeguard its solvency and overall economic stability.

The final version aims at:

Ensuring that capital allocation is more risk sensitive;
Separating operational risk from credit risk, and quantifying both;
Attempting to align economic and regulatory capital more closely to reduce the scope for regulatory arbitrage.
While the final accord has largely addressed the regulatory arbitrage issue, there are still areas where regulatory capital requirements will diverge from the economic.

Basel II has largely left unchanged the question of how to actually define bank capital, which diverges from accounting equity in important respects. The Basel I definition, as modified up to the present, remains in place.

en.wikipedia.org



To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (28731)1/28/2008 11:45:08 PM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217773
 
Google means "ask cyberspace" right? Or does it just mean ask Google?

One of my major concerns with Qi is to make it bullet-proof. As you say, most things have failure mechanisms and when we all depend on something, it's a big risk. So things need to be battle-hardened in parallel with replacement systems until they can take anything. Hopefully, fingers crossed.

Cyberspace hasn't yet seized up in a netileptic seizure but I suspect it could and that would be a major problem. Denial of service by China of the whole of cyberspace for example could perhaps be achieved.

Mq