In this session, Isabela Campo walks us through Africa’s new regulatory landscape and what financial institutions need to know.
Risk is no longer an administrative exercise. It is becoming the organising principle for sustainable institutions.
The "Old" Reality: Reactive, fragmented, and box-ticking
The "New" Reality: Integrated, proactive, and outcome-based
African supervisors are aligning with global standards (Basel III) to ensure banks can survive financial shocks.
Key Metrics:
LCR (Liquidity Coverage Ratio): Do you have enough cash to survive a 30-day run?
NSFR (Net Stable Funding Ratio): Are you funded by stable, long-term deposits?
Impact: Higher capital requirements and stricter liquidity buffers. It's not just about profit; it's about solvency.
Basel III
Is a global regulatory standard designed to make banking safer after the 2008 financial crisis. It requires banks to hold more capital and keep enough liquid cash on hand to survive financial shocks without needing a government bailout.
Driven by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) evaluations and the push to exit (or stay off) the Grey List.
The Core Law (South Africa Example): Financial Institutions Conduct Authority (FICA).
The "Accountable Institution": Financial institutions are the gatekeepers.
Mandatory Actions:
Requirement:
Material Incident Reporting: Financial institutions must report "material" cyber incidents immediately.
Recoverability: Systems must demonstrate the ability to recover critical operations within hours, not days.
The Shift: From "Caveat Emptor" (Buyer Beware) to "Treating Customers Fairly" (TCF).
Regulation: The COFI Bill (Conduct of Financial Institutions) and new COMESA regulations.
Focus Areas:
The Driver: Climate change poses a threat to financial stability (Physical & Transition Risks).
Key Standards: IFRS S1 & S2 (Sustainability Disclosure Standards) replacing voluntary TCFD.
Mandatory Actions:
These 5 areas often sit in silos (Compliance, IT, Legal, Risk, ESG).
The Solution: Integrated Risk Management (IRM).
Strategy: Data shared across these pillars allows for a proactive view.
Africa is moving towards a financial system that is not just compliant, but robust, fair, and sustainable." Don't wait for the regulator to knock. Build the pillars now.