Enter Gross Income
BIA Formula
Capital Requirement
Gross Income vs Capital
Formula Breakdown
Educational Note
This calculator implements the Basel Basic Indicator Approach (BIA) for educational purposes. The BIA was introduced in Basel II (2004). The Basel III 2017 reform replaced BIA, TSA, and AMA with the Standardised Measurement Approach (SMA), effective January 1, 2023. The SMA combines a Business Indicator Component with an Internal Loss Multiplier for more risk-sensitive capital requirements. See the paired article for a full comparison of all approaches.
Model Assumptions
- Basic Indicator Approach (BIA) per Basel II Accord (2004)
- Alpha = 15% is fixed by the Basel Committee
- Gross Income = Net Interest Income + Net Non-Interest Income
- Years with GI ≤ 0 are excluded from both numerator and denominator
- Simplified for educational purposes; not for regulatory compliance
Understanding Operational Risk Capital
What is Operational Risk?
Operational risk is the risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people, and systems, or from external events. It includes legal risk but excludes strategic and reputational risk. Banks must hold capital against operational risk to ensure they can absorb unexpected losses.
Where n = count of years with GI > 0 (years with GI ≤ 0 are excluded)
Evolution of Basel Operational Risk Framework
Basel II (2004)
Three approaches: Basic Indicator (BIA), Standardised (TSA), and Advanced Measurement (AMA). BIA uses a single 15% multiplier on average gross income.
Basel III (2017+)
Standardised Measurement Approach (SMA): Replaced all three approaches with a more risk-sensitive formula combining a Business Indicator Component and Internal Loss Multiplier. Effective January 1, 2023.
What is Gross Income?
For BIA purposes, Gross Income is defined as:
- Net interest income (interest received minus interest paid)
- Net non-interest income (fees, commissions, trading income, other operating income)
- Gross of provisions and operating expenses
- Excludes: Realized gains/losses from sale of banking book securities, extraordinary items, income from insurance
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only. The BIA formula shown is simplified and should not be used for regulatory capital calculations. Actual regulatory requirements involve additional complexities and supervisory approval. Consult qualified professionals for compliance matters.
Course by Ryan O'Connell, CFA, FRM
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