Tier 1 Common Capital Ratio

Tier 1 Common Capital Ratio

Tier 1 common capital ratio is a measurement of a bank's core equity capital, compared with its total risk-weighted assets, and signifies a bank's financial strength. T 1 C C C \= T 1 C − P S − N I T R W A where: T 1 C C C \= Tier 1 common capital ratio T 1 C \= Tier 1 capital P S \= Preferred stock N C \= Noncontrolling interests T R W A \= Total risk controlling assets \\begin{aligned} &T1CCC = \\dfrac{T1C - PS - NI}{TRWA}\\\\ &\\textbf{where:}\\\\ &T1CCC = \\text{Tier 1 common capital ratio}\\\\ &T1C = \\text{Tier 1 capital}\\\\ &PS = \\text{Preferred stock}\\\\ &NC = \\text{Noncontrolling interests}\\\\ &TRWA = \\text{Total risk controlling assets}\\\\ \\end{aligned} T1CCC\=TRWAT1C−PS−NIwhere:T1CCC\=Tier 1 common capital ratioT1C\=Tier 1 capitalPS\=Preferred stockNC\=Noncontrolling interestsTRWA\=Total risk controlling assets 2:07 To be classified as well-capitalized, a firm must have a Tier 1 common capital ratio of 7% or greater, and not pay any dividends or distributions that would reduce that ratio below 7%. A firm characterized as a systemically important financial institution (SIFI) is subject to an additional 3% cushion for its Tier 1 common capital ratio, making its threshold to be considered well-capitalized at 10%. Dividing the Tier 1 common capital of $8 billion less the $500 in preferreds by total risk-weighted assets of $100 billion yields a Tier 1 common capital ratio of 7.5%. The Tier 1 common capital ratio differs from the closely-related Tier 1 capital ratio because it excludes any preferred shares or non-controlling interests.

The Tier 1 common capital ratio is a measurement of a bank's core equity capital, compared with its total risk-weighted assets, that signifies a bank's financial strength.

What Is the Tier 1 Common Capital Ratio?

Tier 1 common capital ratio is a measurement of a bank's core equity capital, compared with its total risk-weighted assets, and signifies a bank's financial strength. The Tier 1 common capital ratio is utilized by regulators and investors because it shows how well a bank can withstand financial stress and remain solvent. Tier 1 common capital excludes any preferred shares or non-controlling interests, which makes it differ from the closely-related tier 1 capital ratio.

The Tier 1 common capital ratio is a measurement of a bank's core equity capital, compared with its total risk-weighted assets, that signifies a bank's financial strength.
The Tier 1 common capital ratio is utilized by regulators and investors because it shows how well a bank can withstand financial stress and remain solvent.
The Tier 1 common capital ratio differs from the closely-related Tier 1 capital ratio because it excludes any preferred shares or non-controlling interests.

The Formula for the Tier 1 Common Capital Ratio Is

T 1 C C C = T 1 C − P S − N I T R W A where: T 1 C C C = Tier 1 common capital ratio T 1 C = Tier 1 capital P S = Preferred stock N C = Noncontrolling interests T R W A = Total risk controlling assets \begin{aligned} &T1CCC = \dfrac{T1C - PS - NI}{TRWA}\\ &\textbf{where:}\\ &T1CCC = \text{Tier 1 common capital ratio}\\ &T1C = \text{Tier 1 capital}\\ &PS = \text{Preferred stock}\\ &NC = \text{Noncontrolling interests}\\ &TRWA = \text{Total risk controlling assets}\\ \end{aligned} T1CCC=TRWAT1C−PS−NIwhere:T1CCC=Tier 1 common capital ratioT1C=Tier 1 capitalPS=Preferred stockNC=Noncontrolling interestsTRWA=Total risk controlling assets

What Does the Tier 1 Common Capital Ratio Tell You?

A firm's risk-weighted assets include all assets that the firm holds that are systematically weighted for credit risk. Central banks typically develop the weighting scale for different asset classes; cash and government securities carry zero risk, while a mortgage loan or car loan would carry more risk. The risk-weighted assets would be assigned an increasing weight according to their credit risk. Cash would have a weight of 0%, while loans of increasing credit risk would carry weights of 20%, 50%, or 100%.

Regulators use the Tier 1 common capital ratio to grade a firm's capital adequacy as one of the following: well-capitalized, adequately capitalized, undercapitalized, significantly undercapitalized or critically undercapitalized. To be classified as well-capitalized, a firm must have a Tier 1 common capital ratio of 7% or greater, and not pay any dividends or distributions that would reduce that ratio below 7%.

A firm characterized as a systemically important financial institution (SIFI) is subject to an additional 3% cushion for its Tier 1 common capital ratio, making its threshold to be considered well-capitalized at 10%. Firms not considered well-capitalized are subject to restrictions on paying dividends and share buybacks.

The Tier 1 common capital ratio differs from the closely-related Tier 1 capital ratio. Tier 1 capital includes the sum of a bank's equity capital, its disclosed reserves, and non-redeemable, non-cumulative preferred stock. Tier 1 common capital, however, excludes all types of preferred stock as well as non-controlling interests. Tier 1 common capital includes the firm's common stock, retained earnings and other comprehensive income.

Bank investors pay attention to the Tier 1 common capital ratio because it foreshadows whether a bank has not only the means to pay dividends and buy back shares but also the permission to do so from regulators. The Federal Reserve assesses a bank's Tier 1 common capital ratio during stress tests to discern whether a bank can withstand economic shocks and market volatility.

Example of the Tier 1 Common Capital Ratio

As an example, assume a bank has $100 billion of risk-weighted assets after assigning the corresponding weights for its cash, credit lines, mortgages and personal loans. Its Tier 1 common capital includes $4 billion of common stock and $4 billion of retained earnings, leading to total Tier 1 common capital of $8 billion. The company also issued $500 million in preferred shares. Dividing the Tier 1 common capital of $8 billion less the $500 in preferreds by total risk-weighted assets of $100 billion yields a Tier 1 common capital ratio of 7.5%.

If we were instead computing the standard tier 1 capital ratio, it would be calculated as 8% since it would include the preferred shares.

Related terms:

Capital Adequacy Ratio – CAR

The capital adequacy ratio (CAR) is defined as a measurement of a bank's available capital expressed as a percentage of a bank's risk-weighted credit exposures. read more

Core Capital

Core capital is the minimum amount of capital that a bank must have on hand in order to comply with Federal Home Loan Bank regulations. read more

Federal Reserve System (FRS)

The Federal Reserve System is the central bank of the United States and provides the nation with a safe, flexible, and stable financial system. read more

Non-Controlling Interest

Non-controlling interest is an ownership position where a shareholder owns less than 50% of a company's shares and has no control over decisions. read more

Risk-Weighted Assets

Risk-weighted assets are used to determine the minimum amount of capital that must be held by a bank, by assigning risk levels to each type of asset. read more

Systemically Important Financial Institution (SIFI)

A systemically important financial institution (SIFI) is a firm that regulators feel would pose a serious risk to the economy if it were to collapse. read more

Tier 1 Capital Ratio

The tier 1 capital ratio is the ratio of a bank’s core tier 1 capital—its equity capital and disclosed reserves—to its total risk-weighted assets. read more

Tier 1 Leverage Ratio

The tier 1 leverage ratio relates a bank's core capital to its total assets in order to judge liquidity. read more

Tier 1 Capital

Tier 1 capital is used to describe the capital adequacy of a bank and refers to core capital that includes equity capital and disclosed reserves. read more

Tier 2 Capital

Tier 2 capital is supplementary capital including items like revaluation reserves, undisclosed reserves, hybrid instruments, and subordinated term debt. read more