The Sun (Malaysia)

Bank Negara: NSFR no earlier than Jan 1, 2019

> Central bank issues exposure draft on implementa­tion of net stable funding ratio, seeks feedback

- BY PRESENNA NAMBIAR

KUALA LUMPUR: Bank Negara Malaysia yesterday issued an exposure draft for feedback from banks to gather comments on the implementa­tion of net stable funding ratio (NSFR).

The central bank intends to implement NSFR at no earlier than Jan 1, 2019.

NSFR is a liquidity standard which comes under the Basel III internatio­nal regulatory reforms. It refers to requiremen­ts for banks to have in place a certain percentage of stable sources of funding, such as commercial papers that have more than a year’s maturity and retail deposits, to support their asset portfolios in the longer term.

The initial deadline proposed by the Basel committee for the NSFR standard of above 100% was Jan 1, 2018.

According to preliminar­y and indicative data, only 75% of banks’ NSFR is above 100%. The industry average, however, stands at 107%.

“This does not in any way signal that our banks are not having best practices in terms of liquidity. It is not reducing the resilience of our banking system,” Bank Negara assistant governor Marzunisha­m Omar said at a briefing yesterday.

The industry average for liquidity coverage ratio, which reflects the shortterm resilience of a bank’s liquidity risk profile, is at 141%, while all banks are above 100%.

Marzunisha­m explained that the Jan 1, 2019 date is in keeping with the divergence in timeline of implementa­tion in other jurisdicti­ons.The US, Canada and Europe have delayed implementa­tion, while China, Japan and the Philippine­s are yet to decide. Indonesia, Singapore, Australia and Hong Kong have committed to a Jan 1, 2018 date.

It is also meant to give banks sufficient time to get ready operationa­lly and for Bank Negara to engage the banking institutio­ns for greater clarity in calculatin­g the NSFR.

Marzunisha­m said it would be incorrect to assume that it is the smaller banks which are yet to meet the NSFR standard, explaining that it is a reflection of a bank’s strategy and not size.

Banking institutio­ns have two months to submit their feedback.

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