Prudential Banking
Bank capital, prudential supervision, and international capital-standard pages that explain how banks stay solvent and regulated.
Prudential banking is the part of regulation that focuses on capital strength, supervision, and resilience.
This branch gathers the Basel accords, capital ratios, prudential regulators, and prudential-regulation concepts together so the banking rules read as one connected framework instead of scattered archive entries.
In this section
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Basel Accords and Capital Standards
Prudential-banking terms for Basel accords, capital standards, capital-adequacy ratios, and bank resilience rules.
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Basel Accord: International Regulatory Framework for Banks
The Basel Accord refers to a set of international banking regulations put forth by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision to promote stability in the global financial system.
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Basel Capital Accords: Evolution of Banking Regulations
The Basel Capital Accords are a series of banking regulations (Basel I, Basel II, and Basel III) aimed at standardizing global banking regulations to enhance financial stability.
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Basel III: The Post-Crisis Framework for Stronger Banks
Learn what Basel III is, why it was introduced after the global financial crisis, and how it changed capital, leverage, and liquidity expectations for banks.
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Capital Adequacy Ratio: The Spelled-Out Name for CAR in Banking Regulation
Learn what the capital adequacy ratio measures, why it matters to regulators, and how it connects bank capital to risk-weighted assets.
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Capital Ratio: How Regulators Judge a Bank's Loss-Absorbing Strength
Learn what a bank capital ratio measures, why risk-weighted assets matter, and how regulators use capital ratios to judge resilience.
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Prudential Regulation: Ensuring Financial Stability
Prudential regulation refers to the framework of legal standards and guidelines designed to ensure the financial soundness of institutions, including capital adequacy, risk management, and governance requirements.
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Prudential Regulators and Bank Models
Prudential-regulation terms for bank supervisors, universal banking, nonbank banks, and monetary-control concepts.
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APRA: Australian Prudential Regulation Authority
Comprehensive overview of the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), focusing on its role in prudential supervision.
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Monetary Control: The Framework of Economic Stability
Monetary Control refers to the various strategies and tools utilized by a country's central bank to regulate the money supply and interest rates to achieve economic goals like controlling inflation, managing unemployment, and ensuring financial stability.
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Nonbank Bank: Financial Institution Outside Traditional Banking Framework
A Nonbank Bank is an institution offering many bank-like services without being under the federal or state banking system's regulation.
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PRA: Prudential Regulation Authority
An in-depth look at the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA), including its creation, functions, importance, and role in UK prudential supervision.
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Universal Banking: Definition, Functions, and Regulatory Framework
An in-depth exploration of Universal Banking, examining its definition, key functions, regulatory frameworks, and its significance in the financial industry.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026