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  1. Home
  2. Single Rulebook Q&A
  3. 2024_7083 Interaction of the risk drivers employed to define the structure of the PD model and the requirement to avoid the excessive cyclicality of own funds requirements.
Question ID
2024_7083
Legal act
Regulation (EU) No 575/2013 (CRR)
Topic
Credit risk
Article
170
Paragraph
4
Subparagraph
c
COM Delegated or Implementing Acts/RTS/ITS/GLs/Recommendations
EBA/GL/2017/16 - Guidelines on PD estimation, LGD estimation and the treatment of defaulted exposures
Article/Paragraph
paragraph 57
Type of submitter
Credit institution
Subject matter
Interaction of the risk drivers employed to define the structure of the PD model and the requirement to avoid the excessive cyclicality of own funds requirements.
Question

Is considering the requirement of CRR Article 170 4(c) to incorporate the ‘delinquency’ risk driver in the structure of rating systems possible, to avoid a potential excessive cyclicality of own funds requirements via the use of appropriate calibration techniques in line with the Entity’s chosen calibration philosophy?

Background on the question

Article 170 4(c) of the CRR requires considering the ‘delinquency’ risk driver when assigning exposures to grades or pools, ‘except where an institution demonstrates to the satisfaction of its competent authority that delinquency is not a material driver of risk for the exposure’. The consideration of this type of information is also reflected in paragraph 57 of the EBA/GL/2017/16 (‘behavioural information, including delinquency and the use of credit facilities’). At the same time, Article 46 of CDR 2022/439 requires competent authorities to verify certain aspects of the PD estimation method, among them the functional and structural form of the estimation method, the cyclicality of the estimation method and the choice of risk drivers. As regards cyclicality, recital 22 of CDR 2022/439 specifies that ‘With regard to risk quantification, it is desirable that the PD estimates are relatively stable over time in order to avoid the excessive cyclicality of own funds requirements’. The consideration of delinquency drivers is key to ensure an adequate risk differentiation in the structure of a rating system, as otherwise obligors not meeting their contractual instalments may not be penalized in terms of credit quality. However, such a driver is generally correlated with the economic cycle (i.e., during distressed economic periods it is expected that there will be more delinquent obligors) and so its consideration may, in the absent of an appropriate calibration technique, lead to cyclicality in que quantification of own funds requirements. The EBA/GL/2017/16 recognise the fact that Entities should understand their rating philosophy (clearly influenced by the choice of risk drivers) and the need to choose an appropriate calibration philosophy in order to reach ‘the objectives behind the chosen calibration and re-calibration process and methodology’. In addition, EBA/GL/2017/16 describe different alternatives in the ‘Background and rationale section’ that may be compliant options provided all regulatory requirements are satisfied.

Against this background, the consideration of highly relevant risk drivers, like ‘delinquency’, and the desire to avoid excessive cyclicality of own funds requirements may be reconciled by the choice of an appropriate calibration technique, consistent with a calibration philosophy pursuing the stability of capital requirements under varying economic circumstances. However, this may entail frequent re-calibrations of the grade level PDs if economic circumstances change. An example of this is given in the ‘Background and rationale’ section of EBA/GL/2017/16: ‘An institution might use a more complex combination, for example by using risk drivers that are quite sensitive to economic conditions in a statistical default prediction model providing PD estimates for individual obligors, (i.e. a PIT rating philosophy), but applying a two-step approach for the purpose of calibration, namely by evaluating these PD estimates on a more recent point in time and subsequently adjusting them such that the average of these estimates reflects the long-run average default rate at the level of the relevant calibration segment (or even portfolio – if there is only one calibration segment)’. The change of economic circumstances would entail the need to select a more recent point in time calibration sample to evaluate PD estimates and, if necessary, adjust PDs accordingly. The need for recalibration of PDs when economic circumstances change, due to the chosen rating philosophy, is the appropriate solution under a point in time rating philosophy. This aspect may be underpinned by the regular (minimum) annual reviews of the risk estimates, in which it can be evaluated whether the outputs of the model are in line with the rating and calibration philosophies chosen by the institutions. In case divergences, arise, estimates should be adjusted.

Submission date
14/05/2024
Rejected publishing date
05/02/2025
Rationale for rejection

This question has been rejected because the issue it raises is beyond the remit of the Q&A process as it would require a revision of the Guidelines on PD, LGD, and Assessment Methodology and therefore it cannot be addressed via a Q&A. 

The Single Rule Book Q&A tool has been established to provide explanations and non-binding interpretations on questions relating to the practical application or implementation of the provisions of legislative acts referred to in Article 1(2) of the EBA’s founding Regulation, as well as associated delegated and implementing acts, and guidelines and recommendations, adopted under these legislative acts. The Q&A process cannot, for example, consider issues which would require changes to the regulatory framework.

For further information on the purpose of this tool and on how to submit questions, please see “Additional background and guidance for asking questions”.

Status
Rejected question

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