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Too Big To Fail Isn't Too Clever To Regulate

The New Indian Express Thrissur

|

August 20, 2025

With debt driving the economy, banks have become powerful. They often use their influence to chip away at the curbs imposed. Regulators need to be better equipped to make them toe the line

- SATYAJIT DAS

Stricter banking regulations known as Basel 3, introduced after the 2008 financial crisis to strengthen the global financial system, are now being systematically weakened. Understanding how regulatory 'sausage' is made gives insights into the problems.

Banks facilitate payments, accept deposits and provide credit and risk management tools. Deregulation and the drive for size and profitability have led banks to expand into underwriting securities, insurance, asset management and trading.

The risk of banking is simple. Unlike funds, banks guarantee the return of deposits. Losses from loans or other activities can jeopardize their ability to meet obligations. High leverage (10-12 times) exacerbates this risk. Banking involves maturity transformation. Deposits have shorter maturities than assets, meaning simultaneous large withdrawals create liquidity risk. Mismatches of maturities can expose the bank to rate fluctuations.

These risks can be addressed by less leverage with banks holding more capital, maintaining liquidity reserves and reducing maturity mismatches. Riskier activities, especially trading, can be restricted or supported by high levels of shareholder funds. Basel 3's attempts to do this were unnecessarily complicated.

Equity, which encompasses many types of securities, is supplemented by a separate leverage ratio. Capital calculations often require arbitrary and subjective differentiation between risks. Banks must meet a liquidity ratio and net stable funding ratio. For off balance sheet instruments, like derivatives whose risks are difficult to estimate, there is a bewildering mix of central clearing, collateral and counterparty risk charges. Trading exposure is measured by complex formulas. Proprietary trading is theoretically restricted. Banks must prepare 'living wills', a funeral plan for unwinding transactions in the event of failure.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE The New Indian Express Thrissur

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Govt seeks legal advice on SC order to provide relief in VIL AGR dues

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The New Indian Express Thrissur

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time to read

1 mins

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HC slams Soren govt over HIV cases among kids from blood transfusion

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time to read

1 min

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The New Indian Express Thrissur

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time to read

1 mins

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The New Indian Express Thrissur

DEBATE & DISSENT, THE INDIAN WAY

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time to read

3 mins

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The New Indian Express Thrissur

BSNL achieves 93% revenue target in Q2 at ₹5,347 crore, says Scindia

STATE-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL) achieved a 93% revenue run rate in Q2, with collections of ₹5,347 crore against a target of ₹5,740 crore, said the Minister of Communication Jyotiraditya Scindia on Thursday.

time to read

1 mins

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The New Indian Express Thrissur

IIT-M prof to lead CBSE expert panel to develop AI curriculum for Class 3

THE Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has constituted an expert committee chaired by IIT-Madras professor Karthik Raman to develop a curriculum for artificial intelligence and computational thinking (AI & CT) for Class 3 students. The education ministry recently decided that this subject would be introduced from the foundation level for students from the academic year 2026-2027.

time to read

1 mins

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The New Indian Express Thrissur

MEIL buys 250-mw TN power unit

MEIL Energy, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Megha Engineering & Infrastructures, has acquired 100% stake in Taqa Neyveli Power Company from Abu Dhabi National Energy Company, for reported 387 million dirhams, or about ₹926 crore.

time to read

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Trailblazers and Next-gen leaders, the South Africa story

NADINE de Klerk was running in to bowl the third delivery of the 43rd over at the ACA Stadium in Guwahati.

time to read

1 mins

October 31, 2025

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