NATIXIS - 2018 Registration document and annual financial report

8 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION Glossary

Acronym/Term

Definition

The amount of capital that banks are required to hold, i.e. 8% of risk-weighted assets (RWA).

Regulatory capital requirement Resecuritization

The securitization of an exposure that is already securitized where the risk associated with an underlying pool of exposures is tranched and at least one of the underlying exposures is a securitization position. The degree of risk, by type and by business, that the institution is prepared to take on in the pursuit of its strategic objectives. Risk appetite can be expressed through either quantitative or qualitative criteria. Document describing the interface between the organization’s key processes and the implementation of the governance that puts the RAS into action. Document setting out, in qualitative and quantitative terms, the risks that the bank is prepared to take. The percentage value by which a given exposure is multiplied, used in the calculation of the corresponding risk-weighted assets. Residential mortgage-backed security, i.e. a debt security backed by a pool of assets consisting of residential mortgage loans. Net income (excluding returns on hybrid securities recognized as equity instruments) divided by shareholders’ equity (restated for hybrid securities), used to measure the profit generated on capital. Exposure value multiplied by its risk weight

Risk appetite

Risk Appetite Framework (RAF) Risk Appetite Statement (RAS)

Risk weight (RW)

Risk-weighted asset (RWA)

RMBS

ROE (Return On Equity)

Compensatory time off in lieu of overtime pay (Réduction du Temps de Travail)

RTT RW

Risk weight

Risk Weighted Assets, or risk-weighted EAD

RWA S&P

Standard & Poor’s SA (Standardized Approach) Approach used to measure credit risk as defined by EU regulations. SCPl Real estate investment trust (Société Civile de Placement Immobilier) SEC US Securities and Exchange Commission Securitization

A transaction whereby credit risk on loan receivables is transferred to investors by an entity through the issuance of negotiable securities. This may involve the transfer of receivables (physical securitization) or the transfer of risks only (credit derivatives). Some securitization transactions are subordinated through the creation of tranches.

Structured Export Finance Single Euro Payments Area

SEF

SEPA SFEF

Société de Financement de l’Économie Française (SPV set up by the French government to refinance French banks during the financial crisis).

Specialized Financial Services

SFS

An equity security issued by a corporation, representing a certificate of ownership and conferring on its possessor (the “shareholder”) proportional rights in the distribution of any profits or net assets as well as a voting right at the General Shareholders’ Meeting. Société d’Investissement France Active—The investment company through which France Active receives solidarity-based savings and invests them in the Social and Solidarity-Based Economy and socially innovative companies.

Share

SIFA

Refers to small-size market capitalization Senior Management Committee Small and medium-sized enterprises Small and medium-sized industries

Small cap

SMC SME

SMI

Measures the ability of a business or an individual to repay its debt over the medium to long term. For a bank, solvency reflects its ability to cope with the losses that its risk profile is likely to trigger. Solvency analysis is not the same as liquidity analysis. The liquidity of a business is its ability to honor its payments in the normal course of its business, to find new funding sources and to achieve a balance at all times between its incomings and outgoings. For an insurance company, solvency is covered by the Solvency II Directive, see Solvency II. European Directive on insurance and reinsurance undertakings intended to ensure that they comply at all times with their commitments towards policyholders in view of the specific risks incurred by such businesses. It aims to achieve an economic and prospective assessment of solvency based on three pillars—quantitative requirements (Pillar I), qualitative requirements (Pillar II) and information for the public and the supervisor (Pillar III). Adopted in 2014, it was enacted into national law in 2015 and came into force on January 1, 2016. The difference between the actuarial rate of return on a bond and the actuarial rate of return on a risk-free loan with the same duration.

Solvency

Solvency II

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Natixis Registration Document 2018

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