Abstract

In the last two decades, both internal and external risk management of banks have undergone significant developments. Banking supervision encourages banks to use a risk-based approach for computing minimum regulatory capital. Accounting rules have been tightened requiring more timely loss reserves for impaired loans. In this article, we propose a comprehensive scheme for calculating the profitability of a loan that could be used both for setting risk-based interest rates when originating a loan and for accurately determining the profitability of existing clients. The scheme utilizes the credit models developed for regulatory purposes and takes the impact of regulation on loan performance into account. We show that accounting loan loss provisions cannot be applied in a performance measurement scheme because they do not reflect the true economic loss. In addition, we demonstrate that it is crucial to measure loan performance over the full life cycle of a loan. Restricting profitability measurement to a time horizon of one year as often observed in practice could be misleading. Although our focus is on profitability measurement, the framework could be applied in a wider context, i.e., for macroeconomic stress tests, bank balance sheet projections, capital management, or evaluating the impact of securitizing parts of a bank’s loan portfolio.

Highlights

  • The profitability of banks is currently on a decline in many countries worldwide

  • If LLP is less than Basel EL on portfolio levels, additional capital is required while if it is higher than Basel EL capital can be released up to a cap of 0.6% of risk-weighted assets (RWA)

  • We discussed the measurement of loan performance, taking into account the latest

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Summary

Introduction

The profitability of banks is currently on a decline in many countries worldwide. One reason is the historically low-interest rates, which are even negative in many jurisdictions (Altavilla et al 2018). Board) have released new standards on building loan loss provisions (LLP) for impaired loans, IFRS 9 (IASB 2014) and CECL (FASB 2016), respectively These reforms have a direct impact on the volume of loans a bank can originate and their profitability. We will show how to utilize these models to build a multi-period projection of future capital requirements, loan loss provisions, and credit risk parameters and discuss its application for loan profitability measurement in detail. We will propose a comprehensive scheme for loan performance measurement that is based on the risk parameters banks have estimated for. The focus of this article is on profitability measurement, the underlying projections of capital, loss provisions, and credit risk parameters could be utilized in a much wider context.

Literature Review
Loan Loss Provisioning under IFRS 9 and CECL
A Framework for Loan Performance Measurement
- Funding Costs
Estimation of Credit Risk Parameters
Determination of Cost Components
Years n Years
An Example for Residential Mortgages
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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