| Mr.Donald J. Mathieson, Mr.Garry J. Schinasi - 2001 - 250 str.
...should evaluate banks' internal capital adequacy assessments and strategies; supervisors should have the ability to require banks to hold capital in excess of the minimum; and supervisors should intervene at an early stage to prevent capital from falling below the minimum... | |
| George Walker - 2001 - 654 str.
...Supervisors should expect banks to operate above the minimum regulatory capital ratios and should have the ability to require banks to hold capital in excess of the minimum.69 While the Committee has imposed a range of minimum requirements under pillar 1, depending... | |
| Philippines - 2003 - 552 str.
...principles. Banks must have sufficient solvency in relation to its risk profile and supervisors must have the ability to require banks to hold capital in excess of the minimum. Banks should assess internally and on an ongoing basis their capital adequacy based on their present... | |
| Johannes Voit - 2005 - 385 str.
...supervisors should expect banks to operate above the minimum regulatory capital ratios and should have the ability to require banks to hold capital in excess of the minimum. Here, it is recognized that the pillar 1 capital charges, conservative as they may appear, were calibrated... | |
| Edith Klein - 2005 - 214 str.
...should evaluate banks' internal capital adequacy assessments and strategies; 3) supervisors should have the ability to require banks to hold capital in excess of the minimum; and 4) supervisors should intervene at an early stage to prevent capital from falling below the minimum... | |
| Harry H. Panjer - 2006 - 448 str.
...process. 3. Supervisors should expect banks to operate above the minimum capital ratios and should have the ability to require banks to hold capital in excess of the minimum. 4. Supervisors should seek to intervene at an early stage to prevent capital from falling below the... | |
| Douglas W. Arner - 2007 - 331 str.
...supervisors should expect banks to operate above the minimum regulatory capital ratios and should have the ability to require banks to hold capital in excess of the minimum (Principle 3). Fourth, supervisors should seek to intervene at an early stage to prevent capital from... | |
| Hennie van Greuning, Zamir Iqbal - 2008 - 336 str.
...Supervisors should expect banks to operate above the minimum regulatory capital ratios and should have the ability to require banks to hold capital in excess of the minimum, (d) Supervisors should seek to intervene at an early stage to prevent capital from falling below the... | |
| 122 str.
...well as market risk. Page 90 Appendix III: Basel II Descriptive Overview Pillar 2: Supervisory Review The Pillar 2 framework for supervisory review is intended...under prompt corrective action provisions. Pillar 3: Market Discipline in the Form of Increased Disclosure Pillar 3 is designed to encourage market discipline... | |
| |