SYSC 20
Reverse stress testing
SYSC 20.1
Application and purpose
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Application
SYSC 20.1.1
See Notes
- (1) SYSC 20 applies to:
- (a) a BIPRU firm, unless it is a BIPRU investment firm excluded in accordance with (2); and
- (b) an insurer unless it is:
- (i) a non-directive friendly society; or
- (ii) a Swiss general insurer; or
- (iii) an EEA-deposit insurer; or
- (iv) an incoming EEA firm; or
- (v) an incoming Treaty firm.
- (2) Subject to (3) and (4), a BIPRU investment firm is excluded from the scope of SYSC 20 if:
- (a) where it carries out the regulated activity of managing investments or safeguarding and administering investments, it has assets under management or administration of no more than £10 billion (or the equivalent amount in foreign currency); or
- (b) the total annual fee and commission income arising from its regulated activities is no more than £250 million (or the equivalent amount in foreign currency); or
- (c) it has assets and liabilities of no more than £2 billion (or the equivalent amount in foreign currency).
- (3) In order to determine whether a BIPRU investment firm is excluded from the scope of SYSC 20 , the exclusion criteria in (2) apply on a consolidated basis to all of the BIPRU investment firms within the same UK consolidation group or non-EEA sub-group as if they were one firm.
- (4) Any BIPRU investment firm which is not excluded in accordance with (2) and (3) in any given year will continue to be subject to SYSC 20 for the following two years irrespective of whether it satisfies the criteria to be excluded in any of those subsequent years.
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Purpose
SYSC 20.1.2
See Notes
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SYSC 20.1.3
See Notes
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SYSC 20.1.4
See Notes
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SYSC 20.2
Reverse stress testing requirements
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SYSC 20.2.1
See Notes
As part of its business planning and risk management obligations under SYSC, a firm must reverse stress test its business plan; that is, it must carry out stress tests and scenario analyses that test its business plan to failure. To that end, the firm must:
- (1) identify a range of adverse circumstances which would cause its business plan to become unviable and assess the likelihood that such events could crystallise; and
- (2) where those tests reveal a risk of business failure that is unacceptably high when considered against the firm's risk appetite or tolerance, adopt effective arrangements, processes, systems or other measures to prevent or mitigate that risk.
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SYSC 20.2.2
See Notes
Where the firm is a member of:
- (1) an insurance group, in respect of which it is required to maintain group capital;
- (2) a UK consolidation group; or
- (3) a non-EEA sub-group;
it must conduct the reverse stress test on a solo basis as well as on a consolidated basis in relation to the insurance group, the UK consolidation group or the non-EEA sub-group, as the case may be.
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SYSC 20.2.3
See Notes
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SYSC 20.2.4
See Notes
- (1) Business plan failure in the context of reverse stress testing should be understood as the point at which the market loses confidence in a firm and this results in the firm no longer being able to carry out its business activities. Examples of this would be the point at which all or a substantial portion of the firm's counterparties are unwilling to continue transacting with it or seek to terminate their contracts, or the point at which the firm's existing shareholders are unwilling to provide new capital. Such a point may be reached well before the firm's financial resources are exhausted.
- (2) The FSA may request a firm to quantify the level of financial resources which, in the firm's view, would place it in a situation of business failure should the identified adverse circumstances crystallise.
- (3) In carrying out the stress tests and scenario analyses required by SYSC 20.2.1 R, a firm should at least take into account each of the sources of risk identified in accordance with GENPRU 1.2.30R (2).
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SYSC 20.2.5
See Notes
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SYSC 20.2.6
See Notes
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SYSC 20.2.7
See Notes
- (1) The FSA may request a firm to submit the design and results of its reverse stress tests and any subsequent updates as part of its ARROW risk assessment.
- (2) In the light of the results of a firm's reverse stress tests, the FSA may require the firm to implement specific measures to prevent or mitigate the risk of business failure where that risk is not sufficiently mitigated by the measures adopted by the firm in accordance with SYSC 20.2.1 R, and the firm's potential failure poses an unacceptable risk to the FSA's statutory objectives.
- (3) The FSA recognises that not every business failure is driven by lack of financial resources and will take this into account when reviewing a firm's reverse stress test design and results.
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