This course provides a comprehensive understanding of Restructuring & Resolution Framework Awareness within the framework of Credit Monitoring & Portfolio Surveillance. Learners will explore how financial institutions interpret and apply restructuring and resolution frameworks used to manage deteriorating credit exposures, distressed borrowers, and asset quality concerns within structured governance environments.
The course explains the scope, intent, and governance significance of Restructuring & Resolution Framework Awareness in credit environments that require structured assessment, boundary definition, independent review, and documented decision-making. Participants will learn how restructuring and resolution awareness supports proactive portfolio risk management, strengthens deterioration surveillance, and improves the timely identification and management of stressed exposures.
Key concepts covered include classification norms, early warning signal identification, risk trend analysis, and proactive portfolio risk management. Each component is examined as a distinct assessment dimension requiring evidence-based validation, independent analytical review, and documented rationale before any restructuring recommendation, escalation response, or credit action is finalized.
The module also clarifies the distinction between Restructuring & Resolution Framework Awareness and broader portfolio restructuring mechanisms. While portfolio restructuring mechanisms focus on the implementation and execution of restructuring solutions, Restructuring & Resolution Framework Awareness specifically addresses the structured identification of deterioration indicators, classification requirements, exposure-related escalation triggers, and governance expectations related to distressed asset management. Learners will understand how these functions operate under separate governance structures, ownership responsibilities, evidence standards, and approval authorities.
Special emphasis is placed on Credit Deterioration & Asset Quality activities, where senior credit leaders establish portfolio limits, govern exception criteria, and drive strategic alignment across Credit Monitoring & Portfolio Surveillance functions. The course demonstrates how restructuring and resolution considerations influence escalation scope, surveillance prioritization, asset quality reviews, and credit committee focus.
By the end of this course, learners will be able to interpret restructuring and resolution frameworks, assess deteriorating credit exposures, identify emerging asset quality concerns, and contribute effectively to structured surveillance governance and proactive portfolio risk management within modern credit monitoring environments.