Basel III Final Reforms for Bank Auditors

Output Floor, FRTB, Credit Risk and Operational Risk Testing

Basel III Final Reforms for Bank Auditors is a practical technical guide for auditors, risk professionals, finance teams and governance reviewers who need to test regulatory capital under the final Basel III framework. The book focuses on the output floor, FRTB, credit risk, operational risk, risk-weighted assets, model governance, data quality, internal controls and audit reporting.

Basel III final reforms changed the way banks measure capital adequacy. The reforms strengthened the standardised approaches, restricted internal model use, introduced the output floor, revised market risk capital through the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book and replaced earlier operational risk methods with a standardised measurement approach. These changes affect internal audit, external audit, regulatory assurance, model validation, finance control, risk management and board reporting.

The book explains how auditors should test Common Equity Tier 1, Tier 1 capital, Total Capital and risk-weighted assets. It connects regulatory capital ratios with source data, exposure classification, model permissions, system configuration, reconciliations, management review and Pillar 3 disclosure. The discussion avoids generic audit theory and concentrates on practical testing questions, evidence requirements and reporting standards.

Readers will find detailed guidance on output floor mechanics and calculation logic. The book explains why banks using internal models still need reliable standardised RWAs and why the standardised approach now acts as a key reference point for the capital denominator. It also covers internal model outputs, floor impact assessment, RWA data testing, mapping controls, aggregation controls, overrides, data gaps and output floor breach reporting.

The FRTB chapters examine the structure of the Standardised Approach and Internal Models Approach. They cover trading book and banking book boundary testing, sensitivities-based method testing, risk factor mapping, market data quality, model approval, P&L attribution, backtesting and audit reporting on market risk capital. The text gives auditors a desk-level view of FRTB and explains how weak data, weak governance or failed model tests affect capital treatment.

The credit risk chapters cover exposure classes, risk weights, due diligence, Internal Ratings-Based restrictions, model use testing, credit conversion factors, off-balance sheet exposures and collateral controls. The book explains how small data fields, such as counterparty type, product code, default flag, collateral value, loan-to-value ratio, maturity and commitment type, drive credit RWAs. It also explains why auditors need source evidence rather than system labels.

The operational risk chapters address the standardised measurement approach, business indicator testing, operational loss data, finance data mapping, incident reporting, cyber events, legal losses, insurance recoveries and internal control testing. The book explains how operational risk capital links finance records with process failures, fraud, systems disruption, customer remediation and governance reporting.

Basel III Final Reforms for Bank Auditors is written for readers who need a structured route through capital audit work. It supports audit planning, fieldwork, evidence gathering, control testing, issue rating, audit committee reporting and supervisory readiness. It gives auditors a clear method for testing whether reported capital ratios rest on reliable capital resources, accurate RWAs, valid model use, sound standardised benchmarks and evidence fit for professional assurance.

juin 2026, env. 216 pages, Anglais
Independently Published
979-8-1843-7509-0

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