Adam Jones analyses IASB Chairman Hans Hoogervorst's speech at the 3rd ECB Conference on Accounting, Financial Reporting and Corporate Governance for Central Banks. He highlights loan impairments and expected loss model.
      
    
    
      
	Hans Hoogervorst, IASB  chairman, on Monday said his organisation had little power to prevent a repeat of the toxic loan damage at the heart of the financial crisis.
	IASB's mechanism for totting up losses on bad loans has been criticised for allowing banks to ignore the consequences of reckless lending for years and then get swamped by a sudden wave of losses. The IASB  and the US accounting standard-setter, the Financial Accounting Standards Board, are nonetheless working on new loan impairment rules based on an “expected loss” model.
	Mr Hoogervorst also queried whether the new Basel III banking regulation reform was strict enough. “Under Basel III, a bank is still allowed to be leveraged 33 times. I am not a prudential regulator, but I truly wonder if a bank with leverage of even just 20 times can accommodate a crisis of Spanish or Irish proportions”, he said.
	The IASB  and FASB  rewrite of loan impairment rules is part of a package of key accounting reforms that is now running at least two years late.
	Press release
      
      
      
      
        © Financial Times
     
      
      
      
      
      
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