Content Options:

Content Options

View Options:


You are viewing the version of the document as on 2021-12-31.

BIPRU 1.1 Application

BIPRU 1.1.1 G RP

1There is no overall application statement for BIPRU. Each chapter or section has its own application statement. Broadly speaking however, BIPRU applies in the following manner8:

8
  1. (1)

    [deleted]8

    8
  2. (2)

    [deleted]

    8
  3. (3)

    to a BIPRU firm;8

    8
  4. (3A)

    to an IFPRU investment firm, only BIPRU 12 (Liquidity standards); and8

  5. (4)

    in relation to8groups containing such firms:8

    1. (a)

      only BIPRU 12 (Liquidity standards) applies to the group containing any of the firms in (3) and (3A); and8

    2. (b)

      BIPRU as a whole applies to the group containing only the firms in (3).8

BIPRU 1.1.2 R

BIPRU applies to a firm in relation to the whole of its business, except where a particular provision provides for a narrower scope.

BIPRU 1.1.2A G RP
BIPRU 1.1.3 G RP

In the main BIPRU only applies to a collective portfolio management investment firm7 in respect of designated investment business (excluding managing an AIF and managing a UK UCITS10). However BIPRU 2.2 (Internal capital adequacy standards), BIPRU 2.3 (Interest rate risk in the non-trading book), BIPRU 8 (Group risk - consolidation) and BIPRU 11 (Disclosure) apply to the whole of its business.

7 7 7

Purpose

BIPRU 1.1.4 G RP

BIPRU 1.1 implements in part the third paragraph of article 95(2) of the UK CRR11 that permits the FCA to apply certain requirements that correspond to11 the Banking Consolidation Directive and8 the Capital Adequacy Directive.

8 3

The definition of a BIPRU firm

BIPRU 1.1.7 R RP

None of the following is a BIPRU firm:

8
  1. (1)

    [deleted]11

  2. (2)

    [deleted]11

  3. (3)

    an11overseas firm;

  4. (4)

    [deleted]11

  5. (5)

    an insurer; and

  6. (6)

    an ICVC.

BIPRU 1.1.7A G RP

8In summary, a BIPRU firm:

  1. (1)

    does not provide the ancillary service of safekeeping and administration of financial instruments for the account of clients, including custodianship and related services such as cash/collateral management, and is not authorised to do so;

  2. (2)

    is not authorised to provide the following investment services:

    1. (a)

      to deal in any financial instruments for its own account;

    2. (b)

      to underwrite issues of financial instruments on a firm commitment basis;

    3. (c)

      to place financial instruments without a firm commitment basis; and

    4. (d)

      to operate a multilateral trading facility;

  3. (3)

    is authorised to provide one or more of the following investment services:

    1. (a)

      the execution of investors' orders for financial instruments; or

    2. (b)

      the management of individual portfolios of investments in financial instruments;

  4. (4)

    may be authorised to provide one or more of the following investment services:

    1. (a)

      reception and transmission of investors' orders for financial instruments; or

    2. (b)

      investment advice; and

  5. (5)

    does not hold clients' money and/or securities and is not authorised to do so (it should have a limitation or requirement prohibiting the holding of client money and its permission should not include safeguarding and administering investments).

BIPRU 1.1.10 G RP
  1. (1)

    This paragraph applies to an undertaking that would be a third country BIPRU firm if it were authorised under the Act.

  2. (2)

    Except in exceptional circumstances, it is the appropriate regulator's policy that it will not give an overseas applicant a Part 4A permission unless the appropriate regulator is satisfied that the applicant will be subject to prudential regulation by its home state regulatory body that is broadly equivalent to that provided for in the Handbook and the applicable UK prudential sectoral legislation11. The appropriate regulator will take into account not only the requirements to which the firm is subject but how they are enforced. The appropriate regulator will also take into account the laws, regulations and administrative provisions to which it is subject in its home state. The reasons for that policy include:

    1. (a)

      it is unlikely that a firm that is not subject to equivalent supervision will be able to satisfy the threshold conditions (and in particular threshold condition 5 (Suitability)) and it is unlikely that it will be possible to establish that the firm does satisfy them; and8

    2. (b)

      such a firm is likely to pose a threat to the interests of consumers and potential consumers, particularly as effective supervision of an overseas firm depends on cooperation between the appropriate regulator and the regulatory body that authorises the firm in its home country and on the appropriate regulator being able to place appropriate reliance on the supervision carried out by such regulatory body.8

    3. (c)

      [deleted]8

      8
  3. (3)

    If an undertaking is not subject to equivalent supervision in its home state and it wishes to carry on in the United Kingdomregulated activities coming within the scope of the activities that define a BIPRU firm it should establish a subsidiary undertaking in the United Kingdom. Such a subsidiary undertaking should be able to show, amongst other things, how it would comply with the threshold conditions (and in particular threshold conditions 3 (Close links) and 5 (Suitability)).

  4. (4)

    If in exceptional circumstances the appropriate regulator does grant a Part 4A permission to an undertaking that is not subject to equivalent prudential regulation the appropriate regulator is likely to take measures under the regulatory system to compensate for the lack of equivalent supervision. These may include applying the prudential requirements for BIPRU firms to the firm.

  5. (5)

    An overseas firm that is subject to equivalent supervision is subject to the threshold conditions and the Principles. BIPRU and GENPRU do not generally apply.

    848

Meaning of dealing on own account

BIPRU 1.1.23 R RP
  1. (1)

    Dealing on own account means (for the purpose of GENPRU and BIPRU) the service of dealing in any financial instruments for own account as referred to in paragraphs 3 of Part 3 of Schedule 2 to the Regulated Activities Order11, subject to (2) and (3).9

    9
  2. (2)

    A11CAD investment firm that executes investors' orders for financial instruments and holds such financial instruments for its own account does not for that reason deal on own account if all of the following conditions are met:9

    9
    1. (a)

      such position only arises as a result of the CAD investment firm's failure to match investors' order precisely;9

      9
    2. (b)

      the total market value of all such positions is no higher than 15% of the CAD investment firm'sinitial capital;9

      9
    3. (c)

      (in the case of a BIPRU firm) it complies with the main BIPRU firm Pillar 1 rules;9

      9
    4. (d)

      [deleted]11

      99
    5. (e)

      (in the case of a11CAD investment firm) it would comply with the rules in (2)(c) if it had been a BIPRU firm on the basis of the following assumptions:9

      9
      1. (i)

        9its head office had been in the UK11; and

      2. (ii)

        9it had carried on all its business in the UK11 and had obtained whatever Part 4A permission required11 for doing so11; and

    6. (f)

      such positions are incidental and provisional in nature and strictly limited to the time required to carry out the transaction in question.9

      9
  3. (3)

    Holding11 of non-trading bookpositions in financial instruments in order to invest capital resources is not dealing on own account for the purposes referred to in article 4(1)(2)(c) of the UK CRR11 (see BIPRU 1.1.7A G).9

    89

[Note: Article 5(2) of the Capital Adequacy Directive (Definition of dealing on own account)]11

BIPRU 1.2 Definition of the trading book

Application

BIPRU 1.2.1 R RP

This section applies to a BIPRU firm.

Purpose

BIPRU 1.2.2 G RP

Pursuant to the third paragraph of article 95(2) of the UK CRR4, this4 section applies4 certain provisions that correspond to4 the Capital Adequacy Directive and the Banking Consolidation Directive relating to the trading book. The precise provisions 4are listed as a note after each rule.

2 2

Definition of the trading book: General

BIPRU 1.2.3 R RP

The trading book of a firm consists of all position in CRD financial instrument and commodities held either with trading intent or in order to hedge other elements of the trading book and which are either free of any restrictive covenants on their tradability or able to be hedged.

[Note: CAD Article 11(1)]

Definition of the trading book: Positions

BIPRU 1.2.4 R RP

The term position includes proprietary positions and positions arising from client servicing and market making.

[Note: CAD Article 11(2) second sentence]

BIPRU 1.2.5 G RP

Positions arising from client servicing include those arising out of contracts where a firm acts as principal (even in the context of activity described as 'broking' or 'customer business'). Such positions should be allocated to a firm'strading book if the intent is trading (see BIPRU 1.2.10 R). This applies even if the nature of the business means that generally the only risks incurred by the firm are counterparty risks (i.e. no market risk charges apply). If the nature of the business means that generally the only risks incurred by the firm are counterparty risks, the position will generally still meet the trading intent requirement in BIPRU 1.2.10 R if the position would meet the trading intent requirement if position risk did arise. The appropriate regulator understands that business carried out under International Uniform Brokerage Execution ("Give-Up") Agreements involve back to back trades as principal. Thus positions arising out of business carried out under such agreements should be allocated to a firm'strading book.

Definition of the trading book: Repos

BIPRU 1.2.6 R RP

Term trading-related repo-style transactions that a firm accounts for in its non-trading book may be included in the trading book for capital requirement purposes so long as all such repo-style transactions are included. For this purpose, trading-related repo-style transactions are defined as those that meet the requirements of BIPRU 1.2.4 R, BIPRU 1.2.10 R and BIPRU 1.2.12 R, and both legs are in the form of either cash or securities includable in the trading book. Regardless of where they are booked, all repo-style transactions are subject to a non-trading book counterparty credit risk charge.

[Note: CAD Annex VII Part D point 4]

BIPRU 1.2.6A G RP

2Capital requirements for term trading-related repo-style transactions are the same whether the risks arise in the trading book as counterparty credit risk or in the non-trading book as credit risk.

CRD financial instruments

BIPRU 1.2.7 R RP

A CRD financial instrument means any contract that gives rise to both a financial asset of one party and a financial liability or equity instrument of another party.

[Note: CAD Article 3(1)(e)]

BIPRU 1.2.8 R RP

CRD financial instruments include both primary CRD financial instrument or cash instruments, and derivative CRD financial instruments the value of which is derived from the price of an underlying CRD financial instrument, a rate, an index or the price of another underlying item and include as a minimum the instruments specified in Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Regulated Activities Order4.

[Note: CAD Article 3(1) last paragraph]

BIPRU 1.2.9 G RP

Generally, for the purpose of the definition of CRD financial instrument:

  1. (1)

    a financial asset means cash, the right to receive cash or another financial asset, the contractual right to exchange financial assets on potentially favourable terms or an equity instrument; and

  2. (2)

    a financial liability means the contractual obligation to deliver cash or another financial asset or to exchange financial liabilities under conditions that are potentially unfavourable.

Trading intent

BIPRU 1.2.10 R RP

Positions held with trading intent for the purpose of the definition of the trading book are those held intentionally for short-term resale and/or with the intention of benefiting from actual or expected short-term price differences between buying and selling prices, or from other price or interest rate variations.

[Note: CAD Article 11(2) first sentence]

BIPRU 1.2.11 R RP

Trading intent must be evidenced on the basis of the strategies, policies and procedures set up by the firm to manage the position or portfolio in accordance with BIPRU 1.2.12 R.

[Note: CAD 11(3)]

BIPRU 1.2.12 R RP

Positions/portfolios held with trading intent must comply with the following requirements:

  1. (1)

    there must be a clearly documented trading strategy for the position/instrument or portfolios, approved by senior management, which must include the expected holding horizon;

  2. (2)

    there must be clearly defined policies and procedures to monitor the position against the firm's trading strategy including the monitoring of turnover and stale position in the firm'strading book; and

  3. (3)

    there must be clearly defined policies and procedures for the active management of the position, which must include the following:

    1. (a)

      position entered into on a trading desk;

    2. (b)

      position limits are set and monitored for appropriateness;

    3. (c)

      dealers have the autonomy to enter into/manage the position within agreed limits and according to the approved strategy;

    4. (d)

      positions are reported to senior management as an integral part of the firm's risk management process; and

    5. (e)

      positions are actively monitored with reference to market information sources and an assessment made of the marketability or hedge-ability of the position or its component risks, including the assessment of, the quality and availability of market inputs to the valuation process, level of market turnover, sizes of positions traded in the market.

    [Note: CAD Annex VII Part A]

Internal hedges

BIPRU 1.2.13 R RP

Internal hedges may be included in the trading book, in which case BIPRU 1.2.14 R to BIPRU 1.2.16 R apply.

[Note: CAD Article 11(5)]

BIPRU 1.2.14 R RP
  1. (1)

    An internal hedge is a position that materially or completely offsets the component risk element of a non-trading bookposition or a set of position. Positions arising from internal hedges are eligible for trading book capital treatment, provided that they are held with trading intent and that the general criteria on trading intent and prudent valuation specified in BIPRU 1.2.12 R and the trading book systems and controls rules. In particular:

    1. (a)

      internal hedges must not be primarily intended to avoid or reduce capital requirements;

    2. (b)

      internal hedges must be properly documented and subject to particular internal approval and audit procedures;

    3. (c)

      the internal transaction must be dealt with at market conditions;

    4. (d)

      the bulk of the market risk that is generated by the internal hedge must be dynamically managed in the trading book within the authorised limits; and

    5. (e)

      internal transactions must be carefully monitored.

  2. (2)

    Monitoring must be ensured by adequate procedures.

    [Note: CAD Annex VII Part C point 1]

BIPRU 1.2.15 R RP

The treatment referred to in BIPRU 1.2.14 R applies without prejudice to the capital requirements applicable to the "non-trading book leg" of the internal hedge.

[Note: CAD Annex VII Part C point 2]

BIPRU 1.2.16 R RP

By way of derogation from 1BIPRU 1.2.14 R to BIPRU 1.2.15 R, when a firm hedges a non-trading book credit risk exposure using a credit derivative booked in its trading book (using an internal hedge), the non-trading book exposure is not deemed to be hedged for the purposes of calculating capital requirements unless the firm purchases from an eligible third party protection provider a credit derivative meeting the requirements set out in BIPRU 5.7.13 R (Additional requirements for credit derivatives) with regard to the non-trading book exposure. Without prejudice to the second sentence of BIPRU 14.2.10 R, where 1such third party protection is purchased and is recognised as a hedge of a non-trading book exposure for the purposes of calculating capital requirements, neither the internal nor external credit derivative hedge must1be included in the trading book for the purposes of calculating capital requirements.

[Note: CAD Annex VII Part C point 3]

Size thresholds

BIPRU 1.2.17 R RP
  1. (1)

    Subject to (3), a firm may calculate its capital requirements for its trading book business in accordance with the standardised approach to credit risk (or, if it has an IRB permission, the IRB approach) as it applies to the non-trading book where the size of the trading book business meets the following requirements:

    1. (a)

      the trading book business of the firm does not normally exceed 5% of its total business;

    2. (b)

      its total trading bookposition do not normally exceed €15 million; and

    3. (c)

      the trading book business of the firm never exceeds 6% of its total business and its total trading bookpositions never exceed €20 million.

  2. (2)

    Subject to (3), if (1) applies, the following are disapplied:

    1. (a)

      the rules relating to the interest rate PRR, the equity PRR, the CIU PRR and the PRR calculated under BIPRU 7.11 (Credit derivatives in the trading book);

    2. (b)

      the rules relating to the option PRR (but only in relation to positions which under BIPRU 7.6.5 R (Table: Appropriate calculation for an option or warrant) may be subject to one of the other PRR charges listed in (2)(a) or which would be subject to such a PRR charge if BIPRU 7.6.5 R did not require an option PRR to be calculated);

    3. (c)

      BIPRU 7.10 (Use of a Value at Risk Model) so far as BIPRU 7.10 relates to the risks covered by the requirements in (a) and (b); and

    4. (d)

      BIPRU 14 (Capital requirements for settlement and counterparty risk).

  3. (3)

    If (1) applies, the following continue to apply:

    1. (a)

      the rules relating to the commodity PRR and the foreign currency PRR;

    2. (b)

      the rules relating to the option PRR (so far as not disapplied under (2)(b);

    3. (c)

      BIPRU 7.10 (so far as not disapplied under (2)(c));

    4. (d)

      BIPRU 14.2.3 R to BIPRU 14.2.8 R (Credit derivatives); and

    5. (e)

      BIPRU 14.2.15 R to BIPRU 14.2.16 R (Collateral for repurchase transactions and other products).

    [Note: CAD Article 18(2)]

BIPRU 1.2.18 R RP

In order to calculate the proportion that trading book business bears to total business for the purpose of BIPRU 1.2.17 R (1)(a) to BIPRU 1.2.17R (1)(c) the firm must refer to the size of the combined on- and off-balance-sheet business. For this purpose, debt instruments must be valued at their market prices or their principal values, equities at their market prices and derivatives according to the nominal or market values of the instruments underlying them. Long positions and short positions must be summed regardless of their signs.

[Note: CAD Article 18(3)]

BIPRU 1.2.19 R RP

If a firm should happen for more than a short period to exceed either or both of the limits imposed in BIPRU 1.2.17 R (1)(a) and BIPRU 1.2.17R (1)(b) or either or both of the limits imposed in BIPRU 1.2.17 R (1)(c):

  1. (1)

    BIPRU 1.2.17 R ceases to apply; and

  2. (2)

    the firm must notify the appropriate regulator.

    [Note: CAD Article 18(4)]

BIPRU 1.2.20 G RP

As required by BIPRU 8.7.21 R (Special rules for the consolidated market risk requirement), a firm should consider whether it meets the threshold conditions in BIPRU 1.2.17 R on both an unconsolidated (or solo) basis and a consolidated basis. If a firm's trading activities on both an unconsolidated (or solo) basis and a consolidated basis are below the threshold size, it may be appropriate for the firm not to adopt the trading book treatment. However, even if the firm does not apply the trading book treatment it should still adopt a trading book policy statement. That statement may be restricted to identifying the activities the firm normally considers to be trading and that would constitute part of its trading book. The firm should use this policy statement to help it to decide whether or not adopting the trading book treatment is appropriate.

Systems and controls for the trading book

BIPRU 1.2.21 R RP

A firm must implement policies and processes for the measurement and management of all material sources and effects of market risks.

[Note: BCD Annex V, Part 7 point 10]

BIPRU 1.2.22 R RP

A firm must establish and maintain systems and controls to manage its trading book, in accordance with the trading book systems and controls rules, BIPRU 1.2.6 R (Definition of the trading book: Repos) and the overall financial adequacy rule to BIPRU 1.2.27 R (Trading book policy statements).

[Note: CAD Article 11(4)]

BIPRU 1.2.23 R RP

A firm must establish and maintain systems and controls sufficient to provide prudent and reliable valuation estimates.

[Note: CAD Annex VII Part B point 1]

BIPRU 1.2.24 R RP

Systems and controls must include at least the following elements:

  1. (1)

    documented policies and procedures for the process of valuation (including clearly defined responsibilities of the various areas involved in the determination of the valuation, sources of market information and review of their appropriateness, frequency of independent valuation, timing of closing prices, procedures for adjusting valuations, month end and ad-hoc verification procedures); and

  2. (2)

    reporting lines for the department accountable for the valuation process that are clear and independent of the front office.

    [Note: CAD Annex VII Part B point 2]

BIPRU 1.2.25 R RP

The reporting line in relation to the matters covered by BIPRU 1.2.21 R to BIPRU 1.2.24 R must ultimately be to an executive director on the firm'sgoverning body.

[Note: CAD Annex VII Part B point 2 (last sentence)]

Trading book policy statements

BIPRU 1.2.26 R RP

A firm must have clearly defined policies and procedures for determining which positions to include in the trading book for the purposes of calculating its capital requirements, consistent with the criteria set out in BIPRU 1.2.3 R to BIPRU 1.2.4 R, BIPRU 1.2.10 R to BIPRU 1.2.11 R, BIPRU 1.1.13 R and BIPRU 1.2.22 R and taking into account the firm's risk management capabilities and practices. Compliance with these policies and procedures must be fully documented and subject to periodic internal audit.

[Note: CAD Annex VII Part D point 1]

BIPRU 1.2.27 R RP

A firm must have clearly defined policies and procedures for overall management of the trading book. At a minimum these policies and procedures must address:

  1. (1)

    the activities the firm considers to be trading and as constituting part of the trading book for capital requirement purposes;

  2. (2)

    the extent to which a position can be marked-to-market daily by reference to an active, liquid two-way market;

  3. (3)

    for positions that are marked-to-model, the extent to which the firm can:

    1. (a)

      identify all material risks of the position;

    2. (b)

      hedge all material risks of the position with instruments for which an active, liquid two-way market exists; and

    3. (c)

      derive reliable estimates for the key assumptions and parameters used in the model;

  4. (4)

    the extent to which the firm can, and is required to, generate valuations for the position that can be validated externally in a consistent manner;

  5. (5)

    the extent to which legal restrictions or other operational requirements would impede the firm's ability to effect a liquidation or hedge of the position in the short term;

  6. (6)

    the extent to which the firm can, and is required to, actively risk manage the position within its trading operation; and

  7. (7)

    the extent to which the firm may transfer risk or positions between the non-trading book and trading book and the criteria for such transfers.

    [Note: CAD Annex VII Part D point 2]

BIPRU 1.2.28 G RP

The policies and procedures referred to in BIPRU 1.2.27 R (1) should cover:

  1. (1)

    the CRD financial instrument and commodities that the firm proposes to trade in, including the currencies, maturities, issuers and quality of issues; and

  2. (2)

    any instruments to be excluded from its trading book.

BIPRU 1.2.29 R RP
  1. (1)

    The policies and procedures referred to in the overall financial adequacy rule and BIPRU 1.2.27 R must be recorded in a single written document. A firm may record those policies and procedures in more than one written document if the firm has a single written document that identifies:

    1. (a)

      all those other documents; and

    2. (b)

      the parts of those documents that record those policies and procedures.

  2. (2)

    A trading book policy statement means the single document referred to in this rule.

BIPRU 1.2.30 R RP
  1. (1)

    A firm must notify the appropriate regulator as soon as is reasonably practicable when it adopts a trading book policy statement.

  2. (2)

    A firm must notify the appropriate regulator as soon as is reasonably practicable if the trading book policy statement is subject to significant changes.

BIPRU 1.2.31 G RP

A significant change for the purpose of the overall Pillar 2 rule includes new types of customers or business requiring different funding or provisioning.

BIPRU 1.2.32 G RP

There is likely to be an overlap between what the trading book policy statement should contain and other documents such as dealing or treasury manuals. A cross reference to the latter in the trading book policy statement is adequate and material in other documents need not be set out again in the trading book policy statement. However where this is the case the matters required to be included in the trading book policy statement should be readily identifiable.

BIPRU 1.2.33 G RP

The trading book policy statement may be prepared on either a consolidated or a solo (or solo-consolidated) basis. It should be prepared on a consolidated basis when a group either manages its trading risk centrally or employs the same risk management techniques in each group member. A trading book policy statement prepared on a consolidated basis should set out how it applies to each firm in the group and should be approved by each such firm'sgoverning body.

Treatments common to the trading book and the non-trading book

BIPRU 1.2.34 G RP

Capital requirements for foreign currency risk and commodityposition risk are the same whether the risk arises in the trading book or the non-trading book. The calculation of capital requirements for foreign currency risk is set out in BIPRU 7.5. The calculation of capital requirements for commodityposition risk is set out in BIPRU 7.4.

Trading book treatments

BIPRU 1.2.35 G RP

All positions that are in a firm'strading book require capital to cover position risk and may require capital to cover counterparty credit risk. Counterparty credit risk in the trading book is dealt with by BIPRU 14.

3 3

Non-trading book treatments

BIPRU 1.2.36 G RP

All positions that are not in a firm'strading book are included in its non-trading book and subject capital requirements for the non-trading book unless they are deducted from capital resources under GENPRU 2.2 (Capital resources).

BIPRU 1.3 Applications for advanced approaches and waivers2

Application

BIPRU 1.3.1 R RP

This section of the Handbook applies to every BIPRU firm that wishes to apply for a permission to use any of the approaches set out in BIPRU 1.3.2 G.

Purpose

BIPRU 1.3.2 G RP
  1. (1)

    A firm may apply for 7a waiver in respect of:

    1. (a)

      the IRB approach;

    2. (b)

      [deleted]5

      5
    3. (c)

      the CCR internal model method; and

    4. (d)

      the VaR model approach.

  2. (2)

    A firm should apply for a waiver if it wants to:

    1. (a)

      apply the CAD 1 model approach; or2

    2. (b)

      apply the master netting agreement internal models approach; or2

    3. (c)

      disapply consolidated supervision under BIPRU 8 for its UK consolidation group or non-UK sub-group7; or2

    4. (d)

      apply the treatment in BIPRU 2.1 (Solo-consolidation waiver); or

    5. (da)

      2apply the treatment for a core UK group in BIPRU 3.2.25 R (Zero risk-weighting for intra-group exposures).5

      5
    6. (e)

      [deleted]512

      25
    7. (f)

      [deleted]5

      25

Article 129

BIPRU 1.3.3 G RP

[deleted]7

4
BIPRU 1.3.4 G RP

[deleted]7

4
BIPRU 1.3.5 G RP

[deleted]7

BIPRU 1.3.6 G RP

[deleted]7

Article 129 permissions and waivers - specific conditions

BIPRU 1.3.7 D RP

6[deleted]

BIPRU 1.3.8 D RP

6[deleted]

BIPRU 1.3.9 D RP

6[deleted]

Waiver - general

BIPRU 1.3.10 G RP

As explained in SUP 8, under section 138A3 of the Act, the appropriate regulator may not grant a waiver to a firm unless it is satisfied that:

3
  1. (1)

    compliance by the firm with the rules, or with the rules as modified, would be unduly burdensome or would not achieve the purpose for which the rules were made; and

  2. (2)

    the waiver would not adversely affect the advancement of any of the appropriate regulator's objectives.3

    3
BIPRU 1.3.11 G RP

The conditions relating to the use of an approach listed in BIPRU 1.3.2 G referred to in the relevant chapter of BIPRU are minimum standards. Satisfaction of those conditions does not automatically mean the appropriate regulator will grant a waiver referred to in those paragraphs. The appropriate regulator will in addition also apply the tests in section 138A of the Act.

BIPRU 1.3.12 G

In the appropriate regulator's view, if the minimum standards referred to in BIPRU 1.3.11 G are satisfied, the conditions referred to in BIPRU 1.3.10 G (1) will generally be met.

Forms and method of application

BIPRU 1.3.13 D RP

Subject to BIPRU 1.3.14 D to BIPRU 1.3.20 D1, if a firm wishes to apply for a waiver to apply an approach set out in BIPRU 1.3.2 G, it must comply with SUP 8.3.3 D.

BIPRU 1.3.14 D

[deleted]5

5
BIPRU 1.3.15 D RP

If a firm wishes to apply for a waiver7to use the IRB approach, it must complete and submit the form in BIPRU 1 Annex 2D D.

BIPRU 1.3.16 D RP

If a firm wishes to apply for a waiver7to use the CCR internal model method, it must complete and submit the form in BIPRU 1 Annex 3D D.

BIPRU 1.3.17 D RP

[deleted]7

BIPRU 1.3.18 D RP

[deleted]7

BIPRU 1.3.19 G RP

In respect of the application for waivers to apply the approaches set out in BIPRU 1.3.2 G (1), the appropriate regulator will aim to give decisions on applications as soon as practicable. However, the appropriate regulator expects that it will take a significant period to determine and give a decision due to the complexity of the issues raised by the applications. Details of timelines for applications for waivers to use advanced approaches 7are set out on the appropriate regulator website.

BIPRU 1.3.20 D RP

Where a firm applies for a solo consolidation waiver, it must demonstrate how each of the conditions set out in BIPRU 2.1.20 R to BIPRU 2.1.24 R are met and address the criteria set out in the guidance in BIPRU 2.1.25 G as part of its application in accordance with BIPRU 1.3.13 D.

BIPRU 1.3.21 G RP

Before sending in an application for a waiver,7 a firm may find it helpful to discuss the application with its usual supervisory contact at the appropriate regulator. However, the firm should still ensure that all relevant information is included in the application.

BIPRU 1.4 Actions for damages

BIPRU 1.4.1 R RP

A contravention of the rules in BIPRU does not give rise to a right of action by a private person under section 138D of the Act (and each of those rules is specified under section 138D(3) of the Act as a provision giving rise to no such right of action).

BIPRU 1 Annex 1D Application form to apply the advanced measurement approach

2[deleted]

BIPRU 1 Annex 2D Application form to apply the IRB approach

This annex consists only of one or more forms.

Forms

BIPRU 1 Annex 3D Application form to apply the CCR internal model method approach

This annex consists only of one or more forms.

Forms