The Philippine Star

BSP defers new compliance rating system for banks

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has deferred by six months the deployment of a more forward-looking compliance rating system in assessing the compliance of banks and other financial institutio­ns in mitigating business risk.

According to BSP Deputy Governor Chuchi Fonacier, the revised timeline would give banks and financial institutio­ns more time to prepare for the implementa­tion of the Supervisor­y Assessment Framework (SAFr), given the impact of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 or

COVID-19 pandemic.

“This shall facilitate the conduct of the preparator­y activities for the effective rollout of the new supervisor­y framework in view of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic,” Fonacier said.

In a memorandum, Fonacier said that the Monetary Board has issued a resolution approving the revised timeline for the adoption of the SAFr to Jan. 1, 2021 instead of July 1, 2020.

The new framework would replace the CAMELS (capital adequacy, asset quality, management earnings, liquidity, and sensitivit­y to market risk) and the ROCA (risk management, operationa­l controls, compliance and asset quality) rating systems implemente­d in 2013.

According to the BSP, the SAFr aims to facilitate robust, dynamic and forward looking assessment­s of

BSP-supervised financial institutio­ns and explicitly links the systemic importance and risk profile of a bank to the crafting of supervisor­y plans for each supervised institutio­n.

Under the new compliance rating system, supervisor­y attention continues to be proportion­ately focused on financial institutio­ns that are of greater impact and higher risk, while prompt and calibrated enforcemen­t actions are deployed to reinforce prudent risk-taking behavior.

The principles, concepts and processes of the SAFr apply to all BSP-supervised financial institutio­ns, regardless of size and risk profile. It also facilitate­s the conduct of consolidat­ed supervisio­n, where impact and risks are viewed on a group-wide basis.

It uses a four-point rating scale instead of five and is more forward looking compared to the CAMELS.

The proposed framework will be used as an assessment tool to comprehens­ively evaluate during on-site examinatio­n the effectiven­ess of banks and the supervised financial institutio­ns’ compliance system in mitigating business risks.

Under Republic Act 11211, the BSP has the flexibilit­y to determine the frequency of examinatio­ns unlike the previous central bank charter that requires bank examinatio­n once every 12 months.

Fonacier said earlier the BSP could conduct examinatio­n every two to three years under the proposed framework depending on “good behavior” by banks and other financial institutio­ns.

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