Leverage ratio as high as 5% could yield net benefits, BIS economists say

There is ‘considerable room for manoeuvre’ in setting leverage ratio

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The BIS

Regulators have plenty of room to increase the leverage ratio beyond the Basel III minimum of 3%, research by economists at the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) has found.

Published as one of the supplementary articles in the BIS quarterly review on November 6, the study attempts a cost-benefit analysis of different values of the leverage ratio.

The BIS's head of financial systems and regulation Ingo Fender and economist Ulf Lewrick find the optimal value to be 4–5%, with the benefits

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