Topic 1. Stress Testing Evolution
Topic 2. Supervisory Capital Assessment Program (SCAP)
Topic 3. Challenges in Designing Stress Tests
Launched: 2009 – First macro-prudential U.S. stress test after the crisis.
Purpose: Assess capital shortfall and restore market confidence.
Outcome:
19 banks were required to raise $75 billion; raised $77 billion instead.
No need to use government funds via the Capital Assistance Program (CAP).
Key Feature: Introduced macro-prudential regulation, focusing on systemic risk.
Impact:
Marked shift from simple pre-crisis testing to robust, systematic evaluation.
Triggered evolution to more complex frameworks like CCAR and EBA.
Q1. Which of the following changes in stress testing was not the result of the 2009 Supervisory Capital Assessment Program (SCAP)?
A. Banks are now required to provide the results of their own scenario stress tests.
B. Stress scenarios are now broader in nature.
C. Stress testing now focuses on the whole firm.
D. Stress testing now focuses on revenues, costs, and projected losses.
Explanation: A is correct.
The 2009 U.S. bank stress test, known as the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program (SCAP), was the first macro-prudential stress test after the 2007–2009 financial crisis.
Topic 1. Modeling Bank Losses, Revenues and Balance Sheet– Key Challenges
Topic 2. Modeling Balance Sheet Over Stress Horizon
Topic 3. Summary – Benefits and Costs of Stress Testing
Topic 4. CCAR Disclosure and International Comparison
Topic 5. Comparison of Macro-Prudential Stress Tests
Topic 6. Stress Test Disclosure: Benefits, Costs and Disclosure
Q2. Piper Hook, a bank examiner, is trying to make sense of stress tests done by one of the banks she examines. The stress tests are multi-factored and complex. The bank is using multiple extreme scenarios to test capital adequacy, making it difficult for Hook to interpret the results. One of the key stress test design challenges that Hook must deal with in her examination of stress tests is:
A. multiplicity.
B. efficiency.
C. coherence.
D. efficacy.
Explanation: C is correct.
One of the challenges of designing useful stress tests is coherence. The sensitivities and scenarios must be extreme but must also be reasonable or possible (i.e., coherent). Problems are inherently multi-factored, making it more difficult to design a coherent stress test. Hook is dealing with the possibly incoherent results of the bank’s stress tests.
Stress Test | Methodologies | Disclosure | Findings |
---|---|---|---|
SCAP (2009). All banks with $100 billion or more in assets as of 2008 year end were included. | Tested simple scenarios with three dimensions, GDP growth, unemployment, and the house price index (HPI). Historical experience was used for the market risk scenario (i.e., the financial crisis-a period of "flight to safety," the failure of Lehman, and higher risk premiums). A "one-size-fits-all" approach. | First to provide bank level projected losses and asset/product level loss rates. | 19 SCAP banks were required to raise $75 billion within six months. The under-capitalized banks actually raised $77 billion of Tier 1 common equity and none of the banks were forced to use the Treasury's Capital Assistance Program funds. |
CCAR (2011) | In recognition of "one-size-fits-all" stress testing, CCAR asked banks to submit results from their own baseline and stress scenarios. | Only macro-scenario results were published. | |
CCAR (2012) | Banks were again asked to submit their own baseline and stress test results. | Similar in detail to SCAP 2009-bank level and asset/ product level loss rates disclosed. | |
EBA Irish (2011) | Similar in design to EBA Europe 2011 | Comparison of bank and third party projected losses; comparison of exposures by asset class and geography. Data is electronic and downloadable. | After passing the 2010 stress tests, 2011 stress tests revealed Irish banks needed €24 billion. Greater disclosure in 2011 resulted in tightening credit spreads on Irish sovereign and individual bank debt. |
EBA Europe (2011). [formerly the Committee of European Bank Supervisors (CEBS)] 90 European banks were stress tested. | Specified eight macro-factors (GDP growth, inflation, unemployment, commercial and residential real estate price indices, short and long-term government rates, and stock prices) for each of 21 countries. Specified over 70 risk factors for the trading book. It also imposed sovereign haircuts across seven maturity buckets. | Bank level projected losses. Comparisons of exposures by asset class and geography. Data is electronic and downloadable. | Eight banks were required to raise €2.5 billion |
Q3. Greg Nugent, a regulator with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, is presenting research on stress tests to a group of regulators. He is explaining that macro-variable stress testing can be
misleading for some banks because of geographical differences in macro risk factors. He gives the example of the wide range of unemployment rates across the United States following the 2007–
2009 financial crisis. Which type of loan did Nugent most likely identify as having losses tied to unemployment rates?
A. Residential real estate loans.
B. Credit card loans.
C. Commercial real estate loans.
D. Industrial term loans.
Explanation: B is correct.
Credit card losses are particularly sensitive to unemployment figures. For example, unemployment was 12.9% in Nevada in July 2011, 3.3% in North Dakota, and the national unemployment rate was 9.1%. Credit card loss rates varied dramatically from region to region during this period. Residential mortgages are affected by unemployment as well but people are generally more likely to quit
paying credit card bills before mortgages.
Q4. A risk modeler has to make assumptions about acquisitions and spinoffs, if dividend payments will change, and if the bank will buy back stock or issue stock options to employees. These factors make
it especially challenging to:
A. get a CAMELS rating of 2 or better.
B. determine if the bank has enough liquidity to meet its obligations.
C. meet the Tier 1 equity capital to risk-weighted assets ratio.
D. model a bank’s balance sheet over a stress test horizon.
Explanation: D is correct.
In a stress model, the starting balance sheet generates the first quarter’s income and loss from the stressed scenario, which in turn determines the quarter-end balance sheet. At that point, the person modeling the risk must consider if any assets will be sold or originated, if capital is depleted due to other actions such as
acquisitions or conserved as the result of a spin-off, if there are changes made to dividend payments, if shares will be repurchased or issued (e.g., employee stock or stock option programs), and so on. This makes it challenging to model the balance sheet over the stress horizon.
Q5. One of the key differences between the 2011 CCAR stress test and the 2011 EBA Irish stress test is that the:
A. CCAR did not require banks to provide results from their own stress scenarios.
B. EBA Irish did not and any banks in violation of capital adequacy requirements.
C. CCAR required disclosure of macro-level, not bank level, scenario results.
D. EBA Irish allowed for 1-year stress horizons.
Explanation: C is correct.
The 2011 CCAR required banks to provide results from their own stress scenarios but the EBA Irish did not. After the 2011 EBA Irish tests, €24 billion was required to increase the capital of several banks. The 2011 CCAR, unlike the SCAP and the 2012 CCAR, only required the disclosure of macro-level scenario results. The EBA Irish did not change the stress horizon from two years to one year.