Wolters Kluwer Financial Services Urges Australian Banks to Examine Business Strategy Impact of FRTB

Banks Advised to Take Note of Far Reaching Impact of Fundamental Review of the Trading Book in New White Paper

SYDNEY--()--Some Australian banks will need to reconsider their business strategy due to significant regulatory changes included in The Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB). That’s according to a new white paper by Wolters Kluwer Financial Services, titled “Fundamental Review of the Trading Book: Impact on Financial Institutions in Australia.”

The requirement to meet heightened risk and regulatory capital calculation obligations included in the FRTB may necessitate investing in new, sophisticated IT infrastructure. This will be costly and may force banks to completely re-assess their business plans, the white paper notes.

The FRTB is the latest revision of trading book capital rules by The Basel Committee for Banking Supervision that aims to ultimately reduce global financial risk. It deals with what it considers to be weaknesses in the current design of the regulatory capital framework as it relates to the trading book by applying more rigorous qualification requirements for the trading and banking books, seeking changes in the constitution of both.

Under FRTB rules, banks will need to respond rapidly and accurately to regulators’ enquiries, whether scheduled or ad-hoc. Moreover, in order to optimize their capital under the new rules, banks will be required to identify all asset classes and trading desks that contribute to capital charge. All affected portfolios will need to be analysed and optimized according to capital parameters. As such, underlying data must be consistent and IT infrastructure must be sophisticated enough to analyse large amounts of data, yet flexible and fast enough to extract required information for regulators at any time.

“The cost consideration may be the key factor in determining whether some market participants decide to completely overhaul their business strategy, concluding that the new rules are too onerous and compliance is too difficult and costly,” notes Soon Kit Tham, risk specialist at Wolters Kluwer Financial Services and author of the report. “Much of what is being proposed in the FRTB could be implemented in 2017. Banks need to start planning and implementation as soon as possible, in order to allow for adequate testing time. Put simply, time is running out.”

About Wolters Kluwer Financial Services

Wolters Kluwer Financial Services provides customers worldwide with risk management, compliance, finance and audit solutions that help them successfully navigate regulatory complexity, optimize risk and financial performance, and manage data to support critical decisions. With more than 30 offices in 20 countries, our prominent brands include: AppOne®, AuthenticWeb™, Bankers Systems®, Capital Changes, CASH Suite™, GainsKeeper®, NILS®, OneSumX®, TeamMate®, Uniform Forms™, VMP® Mortgage Solutions and Wiz®. Wolters Kluwer Financial Services is part of Wolters Kluwer, which had 2014 annual revenues of €3.7 billion ($4.9 billion), employs 19,000 employees worldwide, and maintains operations in over 170 countries across Europe, North America, Asia Pacific, and Latin America. Wolters Kluwer is headquartered in Alphen aan den Rijn, the Netherlands. Its shares are quoted on Euronext Amsterdam (WKL) and are included in the AEX and Euronext 100 indices.

Contacts

Wolters Kluwer Financial Services
Dennis Khng, +(65) 6380 8099
Corporate Communications Manager, Asia Pacific
dennis.khng@wolterskluwer.com
On Twitter: @denniskhng
or
For media outside of Asia Pacific:
Paul Lyon, +44 (0)20 7539 6575
Director of International Communications
paul.lyon@wolterskluwer.com
On Twitter: @PaulLyon_WKFS

Release Summary

Australian banks will need to reconsider their business strategy due to FRTB changes, says Wolters Kluwer Financial Services.

Contacts

Wolters Kluwer Financial Services
Dennis Khng, +(65) 6380 8099
Corporate Communications Manager, Asia Pacific
dennis.khng@wolterskluwer.com
On Twitter: @denniskhng
or
For media outside of Asia Pacific:
Paul Lyon, +44 (0)20 7539 6575
Director of International Communications
paul.lyon@wolterskluwer.com
On Twitter: @PaulLyon_WKFS