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  • Large Exposures Regulation

    • Introduction

      The Central Bank seeks to promote the effective and efficient development and functioning of the banking system. To this end, the Central Bank is issuing this regulation setting large exposure limits for Banks.

      The regulation is aimed at banks' management of risk concentrations, and in particular the risk that the default of a single counterparty or Group Of Connected Counterparties would endanger the solvency of the Bank.

    • Scope

      This regulation applies to all Banks, including branches of foreign banks, operating in the UAE.

      The requirements apply at every tier within a banking group, meaning at solo and consolidated level, and all levels of sub-consolidation.

    • Objective

      This regulation is seeking to manage concentrations and limit the maximum possible loss a Bank could incur due to the failure of a single counterparty or Group Of Connected Counterparties.

    • Article (1): Definitions

      1.1 Bank: Any juridical person licensed in accordance with the provisions of the Central Bank Law, to primarily carry on the activity of taking deposits, and any other Licensed Financial Activities.

      1.2 Branch Capital: shall mean the fully paid-up capital at branch level as defined in the Minimum Capital for Banks Regulation.

      1.3 Central Bank: The Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates.

      1.4 Central Bank Law: Decretal Federal Law No. (14) of 2018 regarding the Central Bank & Organization of Financial Institutions and Activities as amended.

      1.5 ECAI: External Credit Assessment Institution.

      1.6 Intraday: funds which can be accessed during the business day, usually to enable financial institutions to make payments in real time.

      1.7 Group Of Connected Counterparties: a group of connected counterparties as defined in Article 4 of this regulation.

      1.8 Qualifying Central Counterparty: A qualifying central counterparty as defined in the Capital Adequacy Standards.

      1.9 Related Parties: the Group and its Controlling Shareholders, members of the board and senior management (and their Relatives) and persons with control, joint control or significant influence over the Bank (and their Relatives).

      1.10 Relatives: The individual's parents, siblings and children.

      1.11 Sovereign: for the purpose of this regulation, sovereign refers to the UAE Federal Government and any other foreign sovereign with a long term credit rating of at least AA- (or its equivalent) issued by an ECAI recognized by the Central Bank.

      1.12 The Unknown Client: where the counterparty of an exposure is unknown to the Bank, for example because a structure does not disclose exposures below a certain threshold, the exposure should be assigned to “the unknown client', to which the large exposure limit applies. For the avoidance of doubt, the exposure to the unknown client is the aggregate of all exposures across all such transactions, regardless of whether they are related in any way.

    • Article (2): Definition of a Large Exposure

      2.1 The sum of all exposure values of a Bank to a counterparty or to a Group Of Connected Counterparties is considered a large exposure if it is equal to or exceeds 10% of the Bank's Tier 1 capital.

      2.2 The exposure value must be calculated in accordance with the provisions of this regulation.

    • Article (3): Large Exposure Limits

      3.1 The sum of all the exposure values of a Bank to a single counterparty or to a Group Of Connected Counterparties must not be higher than 25% of the Bank's Tier 1 capital at all times.

      3.2 For a global systemically important Bank's exposures to another global systemically important bank, the large exposure limit is 15%. When a bank is identified by the Financial Stability Board as a global systemically important bank, Banks must apply the 15% limit within 12 months of publication of the list by the Financial Stability Board.

      3.3 For exposures to the UAE local governments and their public sector entities, the large exposure limits as set out in Article 12 of this regulation apply.

      3.4 Additional restrictions apply to exposures to Related Parties as set out in Article 18 of this regulation.

      3.5 Breaches of the limits described in Article 3.1 to 3.4 must be communicated immediately to the Central Bank and must be rapidly rectified.

      3.6 For any breaches of the limits described in Article 3.1 to 3.4, the Tier 1 capital will be reduced by the amount by which the limit is breached.

      3.7 The Central Bank may in exceptional cases, if it deems the risk to be low, waive the application of Article 3.6 for exposures to a particular counterparty or Group of Connected Counterparties, and determine a risk-weight to be applied to the amount by which the limit is breached instead.

    • Article (4): Connected Counterparties

      4.1 Two or more counterparties shall be considered a Group Of Connected Counterparties if at least one of the following criteria is satisfied:

      4.1.1 Control relationship: one of the counterparties, directly or indirectly, has control over the other(s).

      4.1.2 Economic interdependence: if one of the counterparties were to experience financial problems, in particular funding or repayment difficulties, the other(s), as a result, would also be likely to encounter funding or repayment difficulties.

      4.2 Banks must assess the relationship amongst counterparties against the criteria listed in Article 4.1 and take into account at least the criteria listed below in Article 4.3 and 4.4.

      4.3 The following criteria must be considered to assess the control relationship between counterparties:

      4.3.1 If one counterparty owns more than 50% of the voting rights of the other counterparty, Banks must consider the control relationship established;

      4.3.2 Voting agreements whereby a majority of voting rights in one counterparty are controlled by another counterparty pursuant to an agreement with other shareholders;

      4.3.3 Significant influence on the appointment or dismissal of an entity's board or senior management, such as the right to appoint or remove a majority of members in those bodies, or the fact that a majority of members have been appointed solely as a result of exercising an individual entity's voting rights;

      4.3.4 Significant influence on senior management, such as where a counterparty has the power, through a contract or otherwise, to exercise a controlling influence over the management or policies of another counterparty, for example through consent rights over key decisions.

      4.3.5 Control relationships as established by the applicable accounting standards.

      4.4 The following criteria must be considered to assess the economic interdependence between counterparties:

      4.4.1 Where at least half of one counterparty's annual gross receipts or gross expenditures is derived from transactions with the other counterparty. For example, the owner of a real estate portfolio rented out for the most part to a single tenant;

      4.4.2 Where one counterparty has guaranteed an exposure of the other counterparty, or is liable by other means, and the exposure is so significant that the guarantor is likely to default if a claim occurs;

      4.4.3 Where a significant part of one counterparty's output is sold to another counterparty, and that counterparty cannot easily be replaced by other customers;

      4.4.4 When the expected source of funds to repay the loans of both counterparties is the same and neither counterparty has another independent source of income from which the loan may be serviced and fully repaid;

      4.4.5 Where it is likely that the financial problems of one counterparty would cause difficulties for another counterparty in terms of full and timely repayment of liabilities;

      4.4.6 Where the insolvency or default of one counterparty is likely to be associated with the insolvency or default of another counterparty;

      4.4.7 When two or more counterparties rely on the same source for the majority of their funding and, in the event of the common provider's default, an alternative provider cannot be found and funding problems of one counterparty are likely to spread to another counterparty due to one-way or twoway dependence on the same main funding source.

      4.5 Where a control relationship has been established based on the criteria set out in Article 4.3 above, a Bank may still approach the Central Bank to demonstrate and seek agreement that such control does not result in the entities concerned constituting a Group Of Connected Counterparties, for example due to specific circumstances and corporate governance safeguards.

      4.6 Where economic interdependence has been established based on the criteria in Article 4.4 above, a Bank may still approach the Central Bank to demonstrate and seek agreement that a counterparty, while economically closely related to another counterparty, may still overcome financial difficulties, including the other counterparty's default.

      4.7 Banks may apply proportionality and apply a risk-based approach when assessing economic interdependence. However, Banks must identify the Group Of Connected Counterparties on the basis of economic interdependence in all cases where the sum of all exposures to one individual counterparty exceeds 5% of Tier 1 capital.

      4.8 The Central Bank may at its own discretion determine that certain exposures must be considered a Group Of Connected Counterparties.

    • Article (5): Reporting Requirements

      Banks must report the following to the Central Bank in the manner established by the Central Bank:

      5.1 All exposures measured in accordance with the provisions of this regulation, taking into account the effects of credit risk mitigation, equal to or above 10% of the Bank's Tier 1 capital;

      5.2 All exposures measured in accordance with the provisions of this regulation without the effects of credit risk mitigation taken into account equal to or above 10% of the Banks' Tier 1 capital;

      5.3 All the exempted exposures with values equal to or above 10% of the Bank's Tier 1 capital;

      5.4 The largest 20 exposures to counterparties measured in accordance with Article 6 of this regulation and included in the scope of application, irrespective of the values of these exposures to the Bank's Tier 1 capital;

      5.5 All exposures subject to additional restrictions as set out in Article 18 of this regulation, regardless of their size; and

      5.6 Exposures by sector, country, and currency.

    • Article (6): Measurement of Exposures

      6.1 As a general principle, the exposure values that must be considered to identify large exposures are the exposures defined under the risk-based capital framework, including both on- and off- balance sheet exposures, both in the banking and the trading book, and including instruments with counterparty credit risk.

      6.2 Exposure amounts that are deducted from Tier 1 capital must not be added to the exposures to that counterparty for the purpose of the large exposure framework. This exclusion does not apply to 1,250% risk-weighted exposures.

      6.3 As a general principle, the exposure value is the accounting value of the exposure, i.e. reduced by the specific provisions and value adjustments.

      6.4 For instruments that give rise to counterparty credit risk, but are not securities financing transactions, the exposure value must be the exposure at default in accordance with the standardized approach for counterparty credit risk.

      6.5 The exposure value for securities financing transactions must be calculated using the comprehensive approach with standard supervisory haircuts for credit risk mitigation as set out in the capital adequacy regulation.

      6.6 The exposure amount for off-balance sheet exposures is calculated by converting the off- balance sheet items into credit exposure equivalents through the use of credit conversion factors as set out in the standardized approach for credit risk. For the purpose of the large exposures framework, the minimum credit conversion factor applied for off-balance sheet items is 10%.

    • Article (7): Credit Risk Mitigation Techniques

      7.1 Only the following credit risk mitigation techniques are considered eligible for the purposes of the large exposure framework:

      7.1.1 Unfunded credit protection meeting the minimum requirements and eligibility criteria for the recognition of unfunded credit protection under the standardized approach; and

      7.1.2 Financial collateral qualifying as eligible financial collateral under the standardized approach.

      7.2 Other forms of collateral that are only eligible under the internal-ratings based approach are not eligible to reduce exposure values for the purposes of the large exposure framework.

      7.3 A Bank must recognize eligible credit risk mitigation techniques in the calculation of an exposure whenever it has used this technique to calculate the risk-based capital requirements, provided the technique also meets the conditions for recognition under the large exposures framework.

      7.4 Hedges with maturity mismatches are recognized in accordance with the risk-based capital framework.

      7.5 In case of a maturity mismatch in respect of credit risk mitigants that are recognised in the risk-based capital requirements, the adjustment of the credit protection to calculate the large exposure is determined using the same approach as in the risk-based capital requirements.

      7.6 Where legally enforceable netting arrangements are in place for loans and deposits, the exposure values for large exposures purposes may be calculated according to the same calculation the Bank uses for capital requirements purposes.

    • Article (8): Credit risk mitigation techniques that reduce the original exposure

      8.1 A Bank must reduce the value of the exposure to the original counterparty by the amount of the eligible credit risk mitigation technique recognised for risk-based capital requirements purposes.

      8.2 The recognised amount mentioned in Article 8.1 is:

      8.2.1 The value of the protected portion in the case of unfunded credit protection;

      8.2.2 The value of the portion of claim collateralised by the market value of the recognised financial collateral when the Bank uses the simple approach for risk-based capital requirements purposes;

      8.2.3 The value of the collateral as recognised in the calculation of the counterparty credit risk exposure value for any instruments with counterparty credit risk, such as over-the-counter derivatives;

      8.2.4 The value of collateral adjusted after applying the required haircuts, in the case of financial collateral when the Bank applies the comprehensive approach. The haircuts used to reduce the collateral amount are the supervisory haircuts under the comprehensive approach - internally modelled haircuts must not be used.

    • Article (9): Recognition of Exposures to Credit Risk Mitigation Providers

      9.1 Whenever a Bank recognises a reduction of the exposure to the original counterparty due to an eligible credit risk mitigation technique, it must also recognise an exposure to the credit risk mitigation providers. The amount assigned to the CRM provider is the amount by which the exposure to the original counterparty is reduced.

    • Article (10): Calculation of Exposure Value for Trading Book Positions

      10.1 A Bank must add any exposures to a single counterparty arising in the trading book to any other exposures to that counterparty in the banking book to calculate its total exposure to that counterparty.

      10.2 Trading book positions not corresponding to concentration risk associated with the default of a single counterparty are out of the scope of the large exposure framework. As such, concentrations in commodities or currencies are not subject to the large exposures limit. Banks must nevertheless appropriately evaluate and manage concentrations in exposures to commodities and currencies.

      10.3 The exposure value of straight debt instruments and equities is defined as the accounting value of the exposure.

      10.4 Instruments such as swaps, futures, forwards and credit derivatives must be converted into positions following the risk-based capital requirements. Such instruments are decomposed into their individual legs; and only the legs representing exposures in scope of the large exposures framework must be considered. This implies that legs that do not entail any risk due to the default of the counterparty are not considered.

      10.5 In the case of credit derivatives that represent sold protection, the exposure to the referenced name must be the amount due in case the respective referenced name triggers the instrument, minus the absolute value of the credit protection. In the case of credit-linked notes, the protection seller needs to consider positions both in the bond of the note issuer and in the underlying referenced by the note. For positions hedged by credit derivatives, see Articles 11.3 to 11.6 of this regulation.

      10.6 The exposure value for options is the change in option price that would result from a default of the underlying instrument.

      Hence, the exposure value of a long call option is its market value.

      The exposure value of a short put option is equal to its strike price minus its market value.

      The exposure value of a short call option equals a negative exposure equal to the market value.

      The exposure value of a long put option equals a negative exposure equal to the strike price of the option reduced by its market value.

      The resulting positions are aggregated with those from other exposures. After this aggregation, negative net exposures are set to zero.

      10.7 Exposure values of a Bank's investments in transactions, such as index positions, securitisations, hedge funds or investment funds, must be calculated in accordance with the same rules as for similar instruments in the banking book. This implies that the amounts invested in such a structure may be assigned to the structure itself, defined as a counterparty distinct from the counterparties corresponding to the underlying assets or to the unknown client, following the rules described in Articles 15.1 to 15.6 of this regulation.

      10.8 Covered bonds held in the trading book are subject to the general treatment for covered bonds described in Article 14 of this regulation.

    • Article (11): Offsetting Long and Short Positions in the Trading Book

      11.1 Banks may offset long and short positions in the same issue and consider only the net position in that issue for the purpose of calculating a Bank's exposure to that particular counterparty.

      Two issues are defined as the same if the issuer, coupon, currency and maturity are all identical.

      11.2 Positions in different issues from the same counterparty may be offset only when the long position is senior to the short position, or if the positions are of the same seniority.

      11.3 For positions hedged by credit derivatives, the hedge may be recognised provided the underlying of the hedge and the position hedged fulfil the requirements of Article 11.2, i.e. that the long position is senior or of equivalent seniority to the short position.

      11.4 To determine the relative seniority of positions, securities may be allocated into broad buckets of degrees of seniority, such as for example “equity”, “subordinated debt”, and “senior debt”.

      11.5 Offsetting of long and short positions in different issues relating to the same counterparty is not allowed in case the Bank chooses not to allocate securities to seniority buckets as described in Article 11.4.

      11.6 For positions hedged by credit derivatives, the provisions of Article 9.1 of this regulation apply and a new exposure to the credit protection provider must be recognised.

      11.7 In case the credit protection takes the form of a credit default swap, and either the provider of the credit default swap or the referenced entity is not a financial entity, the amount to be assigned to the credit protection provider is the counterparty credit risk exposure value as calculated under the standardized approach for counterparty credit risk.

      11.8 Financial entities, for this purpose, includes regulated financial institutions, including nonbank financial institutions and foreign financial institutions, as well as unregulated financial institutions whose main business includes the management of financial assets, lending, factoring, leasing, provision of credit enhancements, securitisation, investments, financial custody, central counterparty services, proprietary trading and other financial services activities identified by supervisors.

      11.9 Netting across the banking and trading books is not permitted.

      11.10 When the result of offsetting is a net short position with a single counterparty, this net exposure need not be considered as an exposure for the purposes of the large exposure framework.

    • Article (12): Sovereign Exposures and Public Sector Entities

      12.1 Banks' exposures to the UAE Federal Government, the Central Bank of the UAE, and exposures to other foreign sovereigns rated at least AA- and their central banks are exempted from the large exposure limit.

      12.2 A Banks' aggregate exposure to the Emirates Governments, meaning the exposure to all of the Emirates Governments combined and inclusive of exposures to their non-commercial public sector entities, is subject to an aggregate limit of 150% of Tier 1 capital. Exposures directly to the Emirates Governments are not restricted at individual level, but exposures to their non-commercial entities are restricted at individual level to 25% of Tier 1 capital.

      12.3 Exposures to the commercial entities of UAE Federal and Emirates Governments are subject to an individual limit of 25% and an aggregate limit of 100% of Tier 1 capital.

      12.4 A commercial public sector entity that is selfsustainable, meaning, at a minimum, that it is profitable and can service its debt from its own resources without a need for any implicit or explicit government support, can be considered as a counterparty separate from its government parent subject to Central Bank approval. This public sector entity, and the Group Of Connected Counterparties it belongs to, is then subject to the general large exposure limit, but not to the aggregate limits described in Article 12.2 and 12.3.

      12.5 Exposures or parts thereof guaranteed by, or secured by instruments issued by, the counterparties listed in Article 12.1 are exempted from the large exposure limit to the extent that the eligibility criteria for the recognition of credit risk mitigation are met.

      12.6 Where two or more entities that are outside the scope of the exemption described in Article 12.1 are controlled by or economically dependent on an entity that falls within the scope of Article 12.1, but are otherwise not connected, those entities need not be deemed to constitute a Group Of Connected Counterparties.

      12.7 While the exposures described in Article 12.1 are exempted from the large exposure limit, these exposures must nevertheless be reported if these exposures meet the criteria for definition as a large exposure.

      12.8 Where an exposure to an exempted entity is hedged by a credit derivative, an exposure to the provider of the credit protection must nevertheless be recognised in accordance with Articles 9.1 and 11.7 of this regulation.

      12.9 Non-commercial public sector entities of the UAE Federal Government are subject to the general large exposure limit as set out in Article 3.1 of this regulation, with the exception of those ‘treated as sovereign' under the credit risk standards.

      12.10 The Central Bank may, on an exceptional, temporary and case-by-case basis, increase the aggregate limit set out in Article 12.2. Such an exception will detail the new maximum permissible limits, and the risk-weight add-on applicable to the amounts by which the normal limits as set out in Article 12.2 are exceeded.

      12.11 The exemption set out in Article 12.1 also applies to multilateral development banks for which a 0% risk weight applies under the Central Bank's credit risk standards.

    • Article (13): Interbank Exposures

      13.1 Intraday interbank exposures are exempted from the large exposure framework.

      13.2 Any other interbank exposures are subject to the large exposure limit set out in Article 3 of this regulation.

      13.3 Banks incorporated in the UAE must limit the aggregate exposure to their foreign branches to 30% of Tier 1 capital, where those branches are located in a jurisdiction which requires them to hold capital in that jurisdiction. The exposure value is equal to the sum of all of the branch's liabilities where the head office is the counterparty, including the dotation capital. The denominator is the entity's Tier 1 capital.

    • Article (14): Covered Bonds

      14.1 For covered bonds, an exposure to the issuing Bank must be assigned equal to 100% of the nominal value of the Bank's covered bond holding, or, where the covered bond satisfies the conditions set out in Article 14.2 below, an exposure to the issuing Bank of at least 20% of the nominal value of the Bank's covered bond holding.

      14.2 To be eligible to be assigned an exposure of less than 100%, a covered bond must satisfy all of the following conditions:

      14.2.1 It must meet the definition of a covered bond: Covered bonds are bonds issued by a bank or mortgage institution and are subject by law to specific supervision designed to protect bond holders. Proceeds deriving from the issue of these bonds must be invested in conformity with the law in assets which, during the whole period of the validity of the bonds, are capable of covering claims attached to the bonds and which, in the event of the failure of the issuer, would be used on a priority basis for the reimbursement of the principal and payment of the accrued interest.

      14.2.2 The pool of underlying assets must consist exclusively of:

      14.2.2.1 Claims on, or guaranteed by, sovereigns, their central banks, public sector entities or multilateral development banks;

      14.2.2.2 Claims secured by mortgages on residential real estate that would qualify for a 35% or lower risk weight under the standardized approach for credit risk and having a loan-to-value ratio of 80% or lower; and/or

      14.2.2.3 Claims secured by commercial real estate that would qualify for the 100% or lower risk-weight under the standardized approach for credit risk and with a loan-to-value of 60% or lower.

      14.2.3 The nominal value of the pool of assets assigned to the covered bond by its issuer should exceed its nominal outstanding value by at least 10%. This requirement can be met also in jurisdictions where the former 10% is not required by law, however in that case the issuing bank needs to regularly publicly disclose that their covered pool meets the 10% requirement in practice.

      This 10% additional collateral may also include substitution assets, such as cash or short term secure assets, and derivatives entered into to hedge risks arising in the covered bond programme.

      14.2.4 The requirements regarding maximum loan-to-value ratio for residential and commercial real estate referred to in Article 14.2.2 must be met following an objective market value of the collateral and frequent revaluation of the collateral.

    • Article (15): Collective Investment Undertakings, Securitisation Vehicles, and other Structures

      15.1 Banks must consider exposures even when a structure lies between the Bank and the exposures, that is, even when the Bank invests in structures through an entity which itself has exposures to assets (hereafter referred to as the "underlying assets"). Banks must assign the exposure amount, i.e. the amount invested in a particular structure, to specific counterparties following the approach described below. Such structures include funds, securitisations and other structures with underlying assets.

      15.2 A Bank may assign the exposure amount to the structure itself, defined as a distinct counterparty, if it can demonstrate that the Bank's exposure amount to each underlying asset of the structure is smaller than 0.25% of its Tier 1 capital, considering only those exposures to underlying assets that result from the investment in the structure itself and using the exposure value calculated according to Article 15.8 and 15.9. This condition is always considered fulfilled whenever a Bank's whole investment in a structure is less than 0.25% of the Bank's Tier 1 capital. In this case, a Bank is not required to look through the structure to identify the underlying assets.

      15.3 A Bank must look through the structure to identify those underlying assets for which the underlying exposure value is equal to or above 0.25% of its Tier 1 capital. In this case, the counterparty corresponding to each of the underlying assets must be identified so that these underlying exposures can be added to any other direct or indirect exposure to the same counterparty. The Bank's exposure amount to the underlying assets that are below 0.25% of the Bank's Tier 1 capital may be assigned to the structure itself (ie partial look- through is permitted).

      15.4 If a Bank is unable to identify the underlying assets of a structure:

      15.4.1 Where the total amount of its exposure is less than 0.25% of its Tier 1 capital, the total exposure amount of the Bank's investment must be assigned to the structure;

      15.4.2 In other cases, the total exposure amount of the Bank's investment must be assigned to “The Unknown Client”.

      15.5 The Bank must aggregate all unknown exposures as if they related to a single counterparty, referred to as “The Unknown Client”, to which the large exposure limit applies.

      15.6 Banks must not circumvent the large exposure limit by investing in multiple structures with identical underlying assets that represent individually immaterial transactions.

      15.7 If the look-through approach does not need to be applied, a Bank's exposure to the structure must be the nominal amount invested in the structure.

      15.8 When the look-through approach is required in accordance with this Article, the exposure value assigned to the counterparty is equal to the pro rata share that the Bank holds in the structure multiplied by the value of the underlying asset in the structure. Thus, a Bank holding a 1% share of a structure that invests in 20 assets each with a value of 5 must assign an exposure of 0.05 to each of the counterparties. These exposures to these counterparties must be added to any other direct or indirect exposures the Bank has to these counterparties.

      15.9 When the look-through approach is required in accordance with this Article, the exposure value to a counterparty is measured for each tranche within the structure, assuming a pro rata distribution of losses amongst investors in a single tranche. To compute the exposure value to the underlying asset, a Bank must:

      (1) First, consider the lower of (a) the value of the tranche in which the Bank invests, and, (b) the nominal value of each underlying asset included in the underlying portfolio of assets

      (2) Second, apply the pro rata share of the Bank's investment in the tranche to the value determined in the first step above.

      15.10 Banks must identify third parties that may constitute an additional risk factor inherent in a structure itself rather than in the underlying assets. Such a third party could be a risk factor for more than one structure that a Bank invests in. Examples of such third parties include the originator, fund manager, liquidity provider, and protection provider. There may be multiple such common risk factors, all of which must be recognised separately.

      15.11 Based on the common risk factor identified in accordance with Article 15.10, a Bank must form a distinct Group Of Connected Counterparties that is subject to the large exposure limit.

      15.12 Banks must assess whether the exposure to the common risk factor is also an exposure to the entity representing that common risk factor. In the case of a credit protection provider, this will be the case, however it may not be the case for the originator or fund manager where the structures can operate independently. If the latter can be demonstrated by the Bank, the exposure to the common risk factor need not be added to the exposure to the entity representing that common risk factor.

    • Article (16): Exposures to Central Counterparties

      16.1 Banks' exposures to Qualifying Central Counterparties related to clearing activities are exempted from the large exposures limit, however, these exposures are subject to the reporting requirements as defined in Article 5 of this regulation.

      16.2 Banks' exposures to non-Qualifying Central Counterparties must be measured as the sum of the clearing exposures described in Article 16.4 and the non-clearing exposures described in Article 16.6, and is subject to the large exposure limit set out in Article 3 of this regulation.

      16.3 The requirement related to connected counterparties set out in Article 4 of this regulation does not apply to exposures to central counterparties specifically related to clearing activities. For non-clearing exposures, the provisions related to connected counterparties fully apply.

      16.4 Banks must calculate the following types of exposure as set out below:

      16.4.1 Trade exposures: the exposure value of trade exposures must be calculated following the relevant provisions of this regulation (as for any other counterparty).

      16.4.2 Segregated initial margin: the exposure value is zero.

      16.4.3 Non-segregated initial margin: the exposure value is the nominal amount of the initial margin posted.

      16.4.4 Pre-funded default fund contributions: the exposure value is the nominal amount of the funded contribution.

      16.4.5 Unfunded default fund contributions: the exposure value is zero.

      16.4.6 Equity stakes: the exposure value is the nominal amount.

      16.5 For exposures where the Bank acts as a clearing member or where the Bank acts as client of a clearing member, the Bank must determine the counterparty to which the exposures must be assigned in accordance with the capital adequacy standards.

      16.6 Any other exposure types not directly related to clearing services provided by the central counterparty must be measured according to the rules set out in this regulation, as for any other counterparty, and are subject to the large exposure limit.

    • Article (17): Risk Management and Governance

      17.1 A Bank must have policies and processes that provide a comprehensive, Bank-wide view of significant sources of concentration risk, including also sources of concentration risk not captured by the large exposure limit as described in this regulation, such as exposures to a single industry, economic sector, geographic region, as well as exposures to a particular asset class, product, collateral or currency.

      17.2 A Bank's information systems must be able to identify and aggregate risk concentrations in a timely manner, and facilitate the active monitoring and management of all risk concentrations as described in Article 17.1.

      17.3 A Bank's risk appetite statement must include thresholds for acceptable concentrations of risk reflecting the Bank's risk appetite. These thresholds must be appropriately integrated into a Bank's processes and procedures, and well understood by any relevant staff.

      17.4 All material risk concentrations must be regularly reviewed and reported to the Board. Such reports must highlight any current, near or expected breaches of the risk appetite and of the regulatory requirements.

      17.5 Senior management must monitor the large exposure limits described in this regulation for the purposes of risk management and to detect any breaches. In the case of breaches, senior management must comply with Article 3.5 of this regulation immediately. Immediate communication means that this communication cannot be subject to Board approval, review, or any other form of confirmation by the Board.

      17.6 A Bank must include in its stress testing programmes the impact of significant risk concentrations.

      17.7 A Bank must cover in its Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP) and Internal Liquidity Adequacy Assessment Process (ILAAP) all forms of concentration risk.

      17.8 New or additional exposures resulting in a large exposure may only be granted following approval by the Board of the Bank, or following approval by a designated Board committee.

      17.9 Where an existing exposure becomes a large exposure for any reason other than the Bank granting an additional exposure, the Board must be informed immediately. Such a large exposure must also be approved by the Board or a designated Board committee, but it may be done ex-post within a reasonable timeframe.

      17.10 A large exposure must be subject to increased monitoring, proportional to its size and risks, in terms of all associated risks, including also risks other than credit risk such as legal, compliance, market and interest rate risk. This should also be reflected in the frequency, detail, and the granularity of reporting to the Board.

    • Article (18): Exposures to Related Parties

      18.1 In addition to the large exposure limits, additional limits apply to the Related Parties as set out below:

        AggregateIndividual
      18.1.1Shareholders who own 5% or more of a Bank’s capital, the Group Of Connected Counterparties they belong to, and their Related Parties50%20%
      18.1.2Bank’s non-bank subsidiaries and affiliates25%10%
      18.1.3Bank’s Board Members25%5%
      18.1.4Bank’s external auditorsProhibited 

       

      18.2 In Article 18.1.1 above, the individual limit for shareholders applies to an independent shareholder, the Group Of Connected Counterparties they belong to, and their Related Parties. The aggregate limit applies to multiple such Groups of Connected Counterparties and Related Parties, which are otherwise not identified as a Group Of Connected Counterparties.

      18.3 Where a Board Member constitutes a Group Of Connected Counterparties with a shareholder who owns 5% or more of the Bank's capital, the lower limits applicable to Board Members apply to that Group Of Connected Counterparties. However, a natural person nominated by a shareholder need not be considered a Group Of Connected Counterparties with that shareholder based on his nomination alone.

    • Article (19): Application to Branches of Foreign

      19.1 The general large exposure limit applicable to branches of foreign banks is equal to the lower of 250% of the Branch Capital and 25% of the entity level capital. This is instead of the limit set in Article 3.1 of this regulation.

      19.2 A branch's head office and its head office's branches are always considered a single counterparty, and, based on the criteria set out in Article 4 of this regulation, will normally constitute a Group Of Connected Counterparties with its group, including all subsidiaries of the ultimate parent, to which the large exposure limits apply.

      19.3 A branch of a foreign bank must limit its exposures to its head office, which includes exposures to other branches of the head office, to maximum 30% of the Branch Capital for funded exposures and 300% of the Branch Capital for unfunded exposures.

      19.4 For the large exposure limits for which the application to branches is not specified, the same limits apply as for Banks incorporated in the UAE, and the limits are applied to the Branch Capital.

    • Article (20): Enforcement & Sanctions

      20.1 Violation of any provision of this regulation and any accompanying Standards may be subject to supervisory action and administrative and financial sanctions as deemed appropriate by the Central Bank.

      20.2 Supervisory action and administrative and financial sanctions by the Central Bank may include withdrawing, replacing or restricting the powers of Senior Management or members of the Board, providing for the interim management of the Bank, imposition of fines or barring individuals from the UAE banking sector.

    • Article (21): Interpretation of Regulation

      The Regulatory Development Division of the Central Bank shall be the reference for interpretation of the provisions of this regulation.

    • Article (22): Cancellation of Previous Circulars and Notices

      This regulation repeals and replaces the following Central Bank Circulars and Notices:

      22.1 Circular No. 32 of 2013 regarding “Monitoring of Large Exposure Limits” and its annexes (including the “Guidelines to Monitoring of Large Exposures”);

      22.2 Notice No. 300/2013 dated 17/11/2013 regarding “Regulations Re Monitoring of Large Exposure Limits”; and,

      22.3 Notice No. 226/2018 dated 1/10/2018 regarding “Large Exposures - Credit Concentrations Above Limits”.

    • Article (23): Publication & Effective Date

      23.1 This regulation shall be published in the Official Gazette in both Arabic and English and shall come into effect (1) one month from the date of publication.

      23.2 A grandfathering scheme will apply to any breaches that are due to the change in regulation, as set out in this Article.

      23.3 The ‘grandfathered basis' is equal to the breach recorded as of 31 December 2022 when applying the requirements of this regulation, deducted by the breach recorded as of the same date when applying the requirements of Circular No. 32/2013 regarding “Monitoring of Large Exposure Limits” and its annexes (including the “Guidelines to Monitoring of Large Exposures”). The aforementioned requirements include the change in capital base, large exposure limits, and calculation methods.

      The grandfathered basis is tied to a specific exposure and counterparty, which will be referred to as the ‘grandfathered exposure', and cannot be used to apply grandfathering to any other exposures or counterparties. For the avoidance of doubt, where the aggregate of multiple exposures to the same counterparty (or Group Of Connected Counterparties) leads to a breach, the grandfathering applies to that specific group of exposures only.

      The grandfathered basis is fixed and does not change over time.

      23.4 The grandfathering basis will determine the ‘grandfathered amount', which is the amount by which a grandfathered exposure may be reduced when applying the requirements of this regulation. The grandfathered amount is determined by multiplying the grandfathered basis with the following percentage:

      23.4.1 100%, upon this regulation coming into force until 30 December 2023;

      23.4.2 75%, from 31 December 2023 until 30 December 2024;

      23.4.3 50%, from 31 December 2024 until 30 December 2025;

      23.4.4 25%, from 31 December 2025 until 30 December 2026;

      23.4.5 0%, from 31 December 2026 and onwards.

      On 31 December 2026, the grandfathering scheme will cease having any effect.

      23.5 Article 3.5 and 3.6 of this regulation do not apply to the grandfathered amount; but apply fully to the exposures in breach after applying the grandfathering scheme.

      23.6 The reporting requirements set out in Article 5 of this regulation fully apply to any grandfathered exposures. Banks that have grandfathered exposures will however be required to attach additional information to their regular reporting to the Central Bank providing an overview of:

      23.6.1 The grandfathering basis as per Article 23.3;

      23.6.2 The percentage applied for the current period as per Article 23.4;

      23.6.3 The grandfathered amount as per Article 23.4;

      23.6.4 The current exposure amount without deduction of the grandfathered amount;

      23.6.5 The amount by which the above (Article 24.6.4) breaches the applicable limits;

      23.6.6 The current exposure amount after deduction of the grandfathered amount;

      23.6.7 The amount by which the above (Article 24.6.6) breaches the applicable limits.

      The Central Bank may issue further instructions on how the above should be reported, including both in terms of content and in terms of format.

      23.7 For interbank exposures, the grandfathering scheme set out above does not apply, and Banks must comply fully by 31 December 2023.

    • Annex 1

      Large Exposures Regulation 1 Annex 1
      Summary of regulatory large exposure limits
      Exposure typeAggregate limitIndividual limit
      General large exposure limit
      Applies to any exposure unless specifically stated otherwise.
        
      1.1 A single borrower or group of related borrowersn/a25%
         
      Exposures with specific limits
      Limits overriding the general large exposure limit.
        
      Sovereign and UAE public sector entity exposures  
      1.2 UAE federal government and their non-comm. PSEs treated as sovereignn/a
      1.3 Foreign sovereigns rated at least AA-
      1.4 UAE local governments150%n/a
      1.5 Non-commercial entities of UAE local governments25%
      1.6 Commercial entities of UAE federal and local governments100%25%
      1.7 Self-sustainable commercial entities of UAE federal and local governmentsn/a25%
         
      Interbank exposures  
      1.8 Intraday interbank exposuresn/a
      1.9 UAE incorporated bank's exposure to its foreign branches (Art. 13.3)30%n/a
      1.10 G-SIB's exposure to another G-SIBn/a15%
         
      Transactions with related parties  
      1.11 Shareholders who own 5% or more of a Bank's capital, the Group of Connected Counterparties they belong to, and their Related Parties50%20%
      1.12 Bank's non-bank subsidiaries and affiliates25%10%
      1.13 Bank's board members25%5%
      1.14 Bank's external auditorsProhibited
         
      Application to branches of foreign banks
      (lower of branch capital limit and entity Tier 1 capital limit)
      Entity Tier 1 capitalBranch capital
      1.15 General large exposure limit25%250%
      1.16 Funded exposures to own head office, its subsidiaries, affiliates and branchesn/a30%
      1.17 Unfunded exposures to own head office and its branchesn/a300%