V originále
In the last 15 years, financial markets experienced a kind of tsunami effect, as the risk first disappeared from the markets like water from the oceans only to return with a vengeance at the start of the crisis in the form of a destructive tidal wave. Such developments were accompanied and fostered by swings in the approach to banking regulation. In the pre-crisis decades politicians and policy-makers adopted too optimistic view of the self-regulation, market discipline and risk management, and, in effect, regulatory Framework got too lenient. After the crisic, the corrective and effectively opposite stance has been adopted. Both Basel III rules and further initiatives should contribute positively to the stability of financial systems. The experience obtained thus far supports the view that the banks that are better capitalised and have higher loss absorbency have a capacity to weather the adverse shocks coming from gobal financial environment much better.