Analysis

Capital Réglementaire

The minimum amount of capital financial institutions are required to hold by regulators to absorb losses and promote systemic stability, calculated under frameworks such as Basel III and Solvency II.

Quick answer: The minimum amount of capital financial institutions are required to hold by regulators to absorb losses and promote systemic stability, calculated under frameworks such as Basel III and Solvency II.

This term page is part of the Protermify Finance glossary and is published as static HTML for fast indexing and clear language coverage.

Languages

Quick answer

The minimum amount of capital financial institutions are required to hold by regulators to absorb losses and promote systemic stability, calculated under frameworks such as Basel III and Solvency II.

Why it matters

Capital Réglementaire matters because it supports clear communication in Analysis contexts for Financial Analysts, Bankers, and Traders. It also connects to aviation training and exam language such as CFA, ACCA, and FRM.

Editorial context

This page is rendered as static HTML from source-backed terminology data so search engines and AI systems can parse the content without client-side code.

Questions and answers

Questions and answers

What is Capital Réglementaire?

In this glossary, Capital Réglementaire refers to: The minimum amount of capital financial institutions are required to hold by regulators to absorb losses and promote systemic stability, calculated under frameworks such as Basel III and Solvency II.

How is Capital Réglementaire used in finance?

In finance communication, this term appears in contexts such as: "Bâle III a augmenté les exigences en matière de capital réglementaire pour renforcer la résilience des banques face aux chocs financiers et protéger les déposants."

Why does Capital Réglementaire matter in finance?

Capital Réglementaire matters because it supports clear communication in Analysis contexts for Financial Analysts, Bankers, and Traders. It also connects to aviation training and exam language such as CFA, ACCA, and FRM.

Who uses Capital Réglementaire?

Capital Réglementaire is mainly used by Financial Analysts, Bankers, and Traders.

What category does Capital Réglementaire belong to?

In this glossary, Capital Réglementaire is grouped under Analysis. Related pages in this category explain adjacent procedures, commands and operational concepts.

Where does this definition come from?

This definition is sourced from CFA Institute, IFRS Foundation, FASB (GAAP), Basel III Framework and published by Protermify Finance as a static finance reference page.

Definition

The minimum amount of capital financial institutions are required to hold by regulators to absorb losses and promote systemic stability, calculated under frameworks such as Basel III and Solvency II.

Operational example

Basel III increased the requirements for regulatory capital to strengthen banks’ ability to withstand financial shocks and protect depositors.

Localized term

Capital Réglementaire

Localized example

Bâle III a augmenté les exigences en matière de capital réglementaire pour renforcer la résilience des banques face aux chocs financiers et protéger les déposants.

Definition language

English reference definition

Source

CFA Institute, IFRS Foundation, FASB (GAAP), Basel III Framework

Category

Analysis

Exam relevance

  • CFA
  • ACCA
  • FRM

Target audience

  • Financial Analysts
  • Bankers
  • Traders

Related terms

Use the related links below to continue through connected finance terminology.

Back to glossary

Termify Get Termify on the App Store OPEN
AI Free AI Search Source-backed aviation answers