Publication dates
Data are published quarterly in March, June, September and December and are available from 2014 Q1. The data are not seasonally adjusted.
Data are published quarterly in March, June, September and December and are available from 2014 Q1. The data are not seasonally adjusted.
The underlying data for the charts, tables and commentary in this publication are the European Banking Authority’s (EBA) Common Reporting (COREP) capital data, found in forms CA1 (own funds) and CA2 (own funds requirements). For further information on the basis of preparation of these data, please see the EBA’s documentation on Implementing Technical Standards on Supervisory Reporting.
For more information on PRA regulated firms, please check Which firms does the PRA regulate?
All data are subject to revision if and when new data become available. This is in accordance with the criteria for incorporating and identifying revisions as set out in our Statistical Code of Practice, and in the context of the underlying Capital Requirements Directive IV (CRD IV) implementing technical standards. This revision policy will be subject to periodic review.
The definitions used throughout these notes for the different types of capital held by banks are those set out in CRD IV. CRD IV sets out the EU’s prudential rules for banks, building societies and investment firms and comprises two elements:
Article 99 of the CRR places a requirement on institutions to report Own Funds (regulatory capital) requirements. The precise format and frequency is set out in the Implementing Technical Standards on Supervisory Reporting (ITS) document, drafted by the European Banking Authority, and creates the European Common Reporting (COREP) harmonised reporting framework. This publication uses data submitted in COREP forms CA1 (Own Funds) and CA2 (Own Funds Requirements). Copies of these templates can be found in the Annexes to the ITS.
CRD IV imposes capital requirements with reference to different types, or ‘tiers’ of capital, which are referred to throughout the Banking Sector Regulatory Capital statistical release. The definitions of these are set out in full in the Capital Requirements Regulation. The most important terms for reading this statistical release are set out below:
For a more complete set of definitions, please see the full Capital Requirements Regulation (575/2013), articles 26-64.
CRD IV imposes capital requirements in relation to an institution’s total risk exposure amount. This is a regulatory concept that weights the accounting value of a firm’s assets and credit exposures according to an assessment of each exposure’s potential to suffer loss. Institutions are able to calculate risk-weighted exposures using either the Standardised Approach, or the Internal Ratings-Based approach (if permitted by their local competent authority). Both are described briefly below:
The values for risk-weighted exposures used throughout this publication are from COREP form CA2 (own funds requirements). The risk exposure groupings used in the publication were made according to the risk groupings within form CA2, and the total for each grouping is the sum of exposures for that grouping calculated using the Standardised Approach and the IRB Approach.
The CRR (Article 92) sets out minimum endpoint requirements for institutions’ own funds. These are as follows:
The CET1 capital ratio is the CET1 capital of the institution as a percentage of its total risk-weighted assets.
The Tier 1 capital ratio is the Tier 1 capital of the institution as a percentage of its total risk-weighted assets.
The total capital ratio is the total capital (own funds) of the institution as a percentage of its total risk-weighted assets.
The requirements set out above are referred to as Pillar 1 requirements. In addition, the UK’s capital framework also includes both Pillar 2 capital requirements that apply to individual banks and system-wide buffers of equity to absorb stress. More details on the capital framework are available in the supplement to the December 2015 Financial Stability Report: ‘The framework of capital requirements for UK banks’.
At present, the CET1 capital ratio and the Tier 1 capital ratio can be calculated on a transitional or an endpoint basis. The difference between these two bases is that using a transitional basis allows institutions to phase in deductions from CET1 over five years, increasing by 20% every year until 2019, and can phase out some instruments that do not meet CRR standards until 2022. In the publication, the CET1 capital ratios and Tier 1 capital ratios presented are based on transitional calculations of CET1 and Tier 1 capital, as reported by institutions in COREP forms CA1 (own funds) and CA2 (own funds requirements).
All metrics contained in this publication are calculated using the data submitted on the highest consolidation basis for each reporter - see the RegData page on the FCA website.
All percentage figures either contained as averages in the tables, or as percentage change figures in the commentary, have been rounded to one decimal place.
Levels of capital and risk-weighted assets that are reported to us in currencies other than GBP are converted into GBP before aggregation. This conversion has an impact on levels of capital, risk-weighted assets and aggregated capital ratios. For example, if GBP depreciates against USD and a firm’s reporting currency is USD, the levels when converted to GBP will be higher than if exchange rates were stable. Aggregate ratios are impacted since increases in the levels of USD reporting firms lead to increased weightings given to these firms’ ratios.
In order to help users understand the relative effects of the changes in the various components, the percentage point change in the total capital ratio has been decomposed into separate contributions attributable to the changes in capital and risk-weighted assets (see Chart 2 in each release). Although this is not strictly possible for an indicator that is defined as the ratio of two components – it can only work for an indicator capable of being written as the sum of distinct terms – the error involved in this decomposition will be of second order in the numerator and denominator contributions, and may be regarded as acceptably small in typical situations. Since the residual error is no more than an artefact of the arithmetic, and in this case is found to be negligible and not visible if plotted in Chart 2, it has been omitted. This residual will be included in future releases if found to be larger than 0.1 percentage points. The Deutsche Bundesbank also adopts this approach to show the decomposition of changes in selected banks’ Tier 1 capital ratio.