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Basel Committee on Banking Supervision

The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (often abbreviated as BCBS) is a global committee of banking supervisory authorities. Think of it as the world's top banking referee, setting the rulebook for how banks should operate safely. Established in 1974 by the central bank governors of the Group of Ten countries, its primary goal is to enhance financial stability by improving the quality of banking supervision worldwide. Hosted by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) in Basel, Switzerland (hence the name), the committee doesn't have the power to enforce its recommendations with legal force. Instead, it operates through a process of consensus and peer pressure, with member countries' authorities (like the Federal Reserve in the U.S. or the European Central Bank) being responsible for implementing the standards in their own nations. Its most famous work is the series of international banking regulations known as the Basel Accords, which have fundamentally shaped how banks manage their capital and risk. For investors, understanding the BCBS is key to understanding the health and safety of the entire banking sector.

Why Should a Value Investor Care?

As a value investor, you're focused on a company's long-term health and resilience, not just its quarterly profits. The rules set by the BCBS directly influence the very foundation of a bank's stability, making them critical for your analysis.

The Basel Accords: A Brief History

The Basel Accords are the BCBS's signature achievements—a series of evolving recommendations that have become the global benchmark for bank regulation. Each version was a response to the perceived weaknesses of the last.

Basel I

Released in 1988, the first Accord was a groundbreaking but simple framework. Its core idea was to connect a bank's capital to its risk.

Basel II

By the early 2000s, finance had become far more complex. Basel II, finalized in 2004, was designed to create a more sophisticated, risk-sensitive framework built on “three pillars.”

Basel III

The 2008 crisis revealed that Basel II was not enough. Banks had enough capital by regulatory standards but still failed spectacularly. Basel III is a comprehensive set of reforms designed to fix these flaws by strengthening bank capital, introducing new safeguards against leverage, and, for the first time, managing liquidity risk.