Publications by year

Public disclosures by banks: results of the 2000 disclosure survey

May 2002

Executive Summary

This report presents the results of a survey on public disclosures made by a sample of internationally active banks in 13 countries. The survey was conducted by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (the Committee) to promote market discipline in banking and capital markets. Taken together with a similar survey conducted a year earlier, the survey also is intended to identify trends in disclosure practices and to serve as a guide to the banking industry by indicating which disclosure practices are currently prevalent and where enhanced disclosures would be desirable.

The survey covers quantitative, strategic, and methodological information that should enable the market to better evaluate banking organizations. It includes questions on capital structure, capital adequacy, market risk internal modelling, internal and external credit ratings, credit risk modelling, securitisation activities, credit risk, credit derivatives, other derivatives, risk diversification, accounting and presentation policies, and other risks.

The results of the 2000 survey show that the most basic information relating to capital structure and ratios, accounting and presentation policies, credit risk, and market risk is well disclosed, with disclosure rates typically over 80% for these survey questions. Disclosure rates generally decrease, however, as the sophistication, complexity, or degree of proprietary of the information increases, with information about credit risk modelling, credit derivatives, and securitisation disclosed by fewer than half of the banks. These areas are of particular importance under the Committee's latest paper on public disclosures, entitled Working Paper on Pillar 3 - Market Discipline and released in September 2001. Thus, it appears that the banking industry is already meeting some of the working paper's proposed disclosure requirements, but there is room for improvement. Moreover, once these proposals are finalised, the Committee expects to see disclosures increase in anticipation of the New Accord coming into force.

Overall, there appears to be a modest increase in the frequency of disclosures as compared to 1999. The most notable increases involve questions on complex capital instruments, policies and procedures for setting credit risk allowances, securitisation, and operational and legal risks - although securitisation disclosures still are not very frequent. For a few survey questions, there appears to be some backsliding, with disclosures appearing less frequently in 2000 compared to 1999.

Other key findings are: