Canadian regulator raises banks' domestic stability buffer to 3%

Reuters

Published Dec 08, 2022 09:58AM ET

Updated Dec 08, 2022 12:16PM ET

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's financial regulator said on Thursday it was raising the amount of capital the country's biggest lenders must hold as a stability buffer by 50 basis points to 3% of risk-weighted assets in response to rising economic uncertainty.

The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) said persistent inflation and rising interest rates along with political tensions had exacerbated vulnerabilities.

The new 3% buffer level, which take effect from Feb 1, "reflects OSFI's observation that high levels of systemic vulnerabilities have persisted and, in some cases, increased in recent quarters," OSFI's Chief Risk and Strategy Officer Angie Radiskovic told reporters in a briefing.

OSFI also expanded the range in which it can set the buffer to between 0% and 4%, saying this would give it more flexibility to respond to economic risks.

Radiskovic said Canadian household indebtedness was rising and that highly indebted institutions were expected to be more vulnerable to economic shocks in a rising rate environment.