2015-08-07
The Bank Supervision Department of the South African Reserve Bank requires banks to embed stress testing into their core governance and risk management frameworks, ensuring results directly inform strategic board and senior management decisions. Institutions must maintain robust, flexible infrastructure that executes comprehensive forward-looking scenarios and reverse stress tests across firm-wide risks, liquidity pressures, complex products, and reputational exposures. These stress testing requirements must be scaled to each bank’s size and complexity while ensuring independent, regular assessment of programme effectiveness.
Annexure B
1.10 As part of an overall stress-testing programme, a bank should take account of simultaneous pressures in funding and asset markets, and of the impact of a reduction in market liquidity on exposure valuation. 1.11 The effectiveness of risk-mitigation techniques should be systematically challenged. 1.12 The stress-testing programme should explicitly cover complex and bespoke products such as securitised exposures. Stress tests for securitised assets should consider the underlying assets, their exposure to systematic market factors, relevant contractual arrangements and embedded triggers, and the impact of leverage, particularly as it relates to the subordination level in the issue structure. 1.13 The stress-testing programme should cover pipeline and warehousing risks. A bank should include such exposures in its stress tests regardless of their probability of being securitised. 1.14 A bank should enhance its stress-testing methodologies to capture the effect of reputational risk. The bank should integrate risks arising from off-balancesheet vehicles and other related entities in its stress-testing programme. 1.15 A bank should enhance its stress-testing approaches for highly leveraged counterparties in considering its vulnerability to specific asset categories or market movements and in assessing potential wrong-way risk related to riskmitigating techniques. 2. Relevance depending on the size and sophistication of banks 2.1 The high-level requirements on stress-testing should be commensurate with the size and complexity of a bank’s business and the overall risk that it accepts. Page 2 of 2