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Basel II Compliance Regulation and Standard Requirements Basel II is an international business standard that requires financial institutions to maintain enough cash reserves to cover risks incurred by operations. The Basel accords are a series of recommendations on banking laws and regulations issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BSBS). The name for the accords is derived from Basel, Switzerland, where the committee that maintains the accords meets. Basel II improved on Basel I, first enacted in the 1980s, by offering more complex models for calculating regulatory capital. Essentially, the accord mandates that banks holding riskier assets should be required to have more capital on hand than those maintaining safer portfolios. Basel II also requires companies to publish both the details of risky investments and risk management practices. 1 The International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards - A Revised Framework. The three essential requirements of Basel II are: 1. Mandating that capital allocations by institutional managers are more risk sensitive. 2. Separating credit risks from operational risks and quantifying both. 3. Reducing the scope or possibility of regulatory arbitrage by attempting to align the real or economic risk precisely with regulatory assessment. Basel II has resulted in the evolution of a number of strategies to allow banks to make risky investments, such as the subprime mortgage market. Higher risks assets are moved to unregulated parts of holding companies. Alternatively, the risk can be transferred directly to investors by securitization, the process of taking a non-liquid asset or groups of assets and transforming them into a security that can be traded on open markets. 2 How important are Basel II requirements and operational risk? So how important are Basel II requirements now, especially given the condition of today's banks? Considering the state of today's financial institutions, some experts say the need for Basel II may be stronger than ever. Although Basel II requirements deal with a range of threats, including market and credit risk, it's Basel II operational risk that will most interest and affect information security professionals. Developing a governance, risk and compliance management strategy to achieve compliance with Basel II requirements Governance, risk and compliance (GRC) management is an integrated approach, not one that necessarily separates a bank's Basel II operational risk, for example, from its legal or market risk. As contributor Michael Rasmussen said, GRC is about organizational collaboration. This kind of "federated" GRC initiative involves a number of 3 professional roles. Building your Basel II compliance roadmap means defining your scope and creating an accurate inventory of systems and processes. Developing a Basel II risk management and reporting strategy Basel II operational risk is defined as the risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people and systems, or from outside events. What does that mean exactly? The financial regulation, created by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, acknowledges that how operational risk is defined can make or break financial institutions, especially given banks' increased reliance on information systems and complex financial instruments. 4