Learn what risk-weighted assets are and why bank capital rules adjust assets by risk rather than treating every dollar of exposure as identical.
Risk-weighted assets (RWAs) are a bank’s assets and certain exposures adjusted by regulatory risk weights. The adjustment reflects the idea that some exposures are expected to be riskier than others and therefore should consume more capital.
RWAs matter because capital ratios often use them in the denominator. A bank with a riskier balance sheet can therefore show a lower capital ratio than a bank with the same raw asset size but safer exposures, even if their accounting totals look similar.
If one asset class receives a higher regulatory weight than another, shifting the balance sheet toward that riskier class can raise RWAs and reduce capital ratios unless the bank also adds more qualifying capital.
A banker says, “All that matters is total assets, because risk weights are just technical noise.”
Answer: No. Risk-weighting changes how regulators and markets interpret capital strength.