- Equity Capital - the amount of operational capital (cash) that the management of a financial institution deems necessary to operate its business.
- Regulatory Capital - the amount of equity capital required of a financial institution by its regulator.
- Economic, or Risk, Capital - an estimate of the worst possible decline in the financial institution’s amount of capital at a specified confidence level, within a chosen time horizon, saving for a "rainy day." It gives senior management insight into a worst-case scenario.
Ideally, financial institutions should hold equity capital of an amount equal to risk capital. Setting capital aside, so to speak, for a very bad day.
Capital illustrated:
- The regulatory body for passenger ships in early 20th Century England was the Board of Trade. It required that 10,000+ ton vessels such as the Titanic carry only 16 lifeboats with a capacity to hold 990 people. In this case,
- "Regulatory Capital" = 990
- The management of White Star Line made the decision to carry 16 lifeboats able to hold 1,178 people, more than what was required by the Board of Trade.
- "Equity Capital" = 1,178
- Risk capital, given the worst-case scenario:
- "Risk Capital" = 1316 passengers + 908 crew = 2,224
Uh oh.
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