Title: Zvi%20Wiener
1Financial Risk Management
- Zvi Wiener
- 02-588-3049
- http//pluto.mscc.huji.ac.il/mswiener/zvi.html
2(No Transcript)
3Breakfast
2 4 5 7 9 11 13 15
50 50
Lunch
50 50
? 11 ? ??
4Correlation ?1
Breakfast
50 50
Lunch
50 50
5Correlation ?-1
Breakfast
50 50
Lunch
50 50
6Correlation ?0
Breakfast
50 50
Lunch
50 50
7Example
- We will receive n dollars where n is determined
by a die. - What would be a fair price for participation in
this game?
8Example 1
- Score Probability
- 1 1/6
- 2 1/6
- 3 1/6
- 4 1/6
- 5 1/6
- 6 1/6
Fair price is 3.5 NIS. Assume that we can
play the game for 3 NIS only.
9Example
- If there is a pair of dice the mean is doubled.
- What is the probability to gain 5?
10Example
All combinations
- 1,1 2,1 3,1 4,1 5,1 6,1
- 1,2 2,2 3,2 4,2 5,2 6,2
- 1,3 2,3 3,3 4,3 5,3 6,3
- 1,4 2,4 3,4 4,4 5,4 6,4
- 1,5 2,5 3,5 4,5 5,5 6,5
- 1,6 2,6 3,6 4,6 5,6 6,6
36 combinations with equal probabilities
11Example
All combinations
- 1,1 2,1 3,1 4,1 5,1 6,1
- 1,2 2,2 3,2 4,2 5,2 6,2
- 1,3 2,3 3,3 4,3 5,3 6,3
- 1,4 2,4 3,4 4,4 5,4 6,4
- 1,5 2,5 3,5 4,5 5,5 6,5
- 1,6 2,6 3,6 4,6 5,6 6,6
4 out of 36 give 5, probability 1/9
12Additional information the first die gives 4.
All combinations
1,1 2,1 3,1 4,1 5,1 6,1 1,2 2,2 3,2 4,2 5,2 6,2 1,
3 2,3 3,3 4,3 5,3 6,3 1,4 2,4 3,4 4,4 5,4 6,4 1,5
2,5 3,5 4,5 5,5 6,5 1,6 2,6 3,6 4,6 5,6 6,6
1 out of 9 give 5, probability 1/9
13Additional information the first die gives ?4.
All combinations
1,1 2,1 3,1 4,1 5,1 6,1 1,2 2,2 3,2 4,2 5,2 6,2 1,
3 2,3 3,3 4,3 5,3 6,3 1,4 2,4 3,4 4,4 5,4 6,4 1,5
2,5 3,5 4,5 5,5 6,5 1,6 2,6 3,6 4,6 5,6 6,6
4 out of 24 give 5, probability 1/6
14Example 1
-2 -1 0 1 2 3
15Example 1
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 we pay
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 6 NIS.
- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
- 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
- 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
- 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
- 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
16PL
- 1 2 3 4 5 6
- 1 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1
- 2 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2
- 3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3
- 4 -1 0 1 2 3 4
- 5 0 1 2 3 4 5
- 6 1 2 3 4 5 6
17Example 1 (2 cubes)
18Example 1 (5 cubes)
19Value
dollar
Interest Rate
interest rates and dollar are NOT independent
20Regulation of Financial Intermediaries
- take deposits, give loans
- very small equity capital, big leverage
- FDIC, CDIC, Israel - implicit
- domino effect
- Minimal capital requirements (8-9)
21Banks
- major increase of off-balance sheet in 80s
- 1988 Basle accord (88 BIS Accord) -
international minimum capital guidelines (credit
risk). - 1996 Amendment - market risk VaR.
- Amendment BIS 98
22Accord Amendment
- assets to capital ? 20
- eligible capital/risk weighted assets ? 8
- minimal capital charge for market risk
- concentration risk
- positions of 10 must be reported
- positions of 25 need special permission
23Accord Amendment
- regulators encourage banks to develop models.
- Banks must implement a RM infrastructure in
their daily RM - limits, monitoring, etc. - G-30 report, 1993.
24G-30 policy recommendations
- The Role of senior management
- Marking to market
- Market valuation methods
- Identifying revenue sources
- Measuring market risk (VaR)
- Stress simulation
- Investing and funding forecasts
25G-30 policy recommendations
- Independent risk management
- Practices by end-user
- Measuring credit exposure
- Master agreements
- Credit enhancements
- Promoting enforceability
- Professional expertise
26G-30 policy recommendations
- Systems
- Authority
- Accounting practices
- Disclosures
- Recognizing netting
- Legal and regulatory uncertainty
- Tax treatment
- Accounting standards
271988 BIS Accord
- Developed by Basle committee
- Accepted by G-10 Belgium, Canada, France,
Germany, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Sweden, UK,
USA. - minimum asset to capital multiple
- risk based capital ratio
281988 BIS Accord
- risk based capital ratio - solvency ratio (Cooke
ratio). - Capital divided by risk weighted on-balance-sheet
assets plus off-balance-sheet exposures. - Weights are based on credit risk.
- No netting or portfolio effects!
- No market risk.
291988 BIS Accord
- The Assets-to-capital multiple ? 20
- Banks total assets divided by its total capital.
- Some off-balance-sheet items, like letters of
credit are accounted at nominal.
30Weights in Cooke ratio
- On-balance-sheet items
- 0 Cash, gold, OECD government
- claims, insured mortgages.
- 20 OECD banks, OECD public sector
- entities.
- 50 Uninsured residential mortgages.
- 100 All other claims.
31Cooke ratio
- Off-balance-sheet credit equivalent.
- 1. Nonderivative exposure - conversion factor is
set by regulators between 0 and 1. - 2. Derivative exposure Current replacement cost
Add-on amount
Risk weighted amount ?AssetsW?Credit
equivalentW
32Cooke ratio
- Banks are required to maintain capital equal to
at least 8 of their total risk weighted assets.
(In Israel 9.)
33Capital
- Tier 1. Stock equity, preferred stock, minority
equity interest in consolidated subsidiaries,
less goodwill and other deductions. - Tier 2. Cumulative perpetual preferred shares,
99 year debentures, some subordinated debt (?5y). - Tier 3. Can be used to cover market risk only.
Short term subordinated debt (?2y). - Tier 1 Tier 2 ? 8, and Tier 1 must be at
least 50 of this amount.
34Models
- Standard model.
- Internal models (based on VaR).
- (3marketVaR10d 4creditVaR10d)trigger/8
- trigger 8 in North America and between 8 and 25
in the UK
35Problems with the current approach
- No distinction between a loan of 100 and 100
loans of 1 each one. - Turkish bank has lower capital requirements than
General Electric. - A loan to AA rated firm is treated as a loan to
a B rated firm. - Some similar contracts are treated differently.
36New proposals
- BIS 2000
- VaR based approach to credit risk.
- CreditMetrics
- CreditRisk
- KMV
- Merton.
37New Approach
- Three pillars
- A. Minimum Capital Requirement
- B. Supervisory Review Process
- C. Market Discipline Requirements
38What is the current Risk?
- duration, convexity
- volatility
- delta, gamma, vega
- rating
- target zone
- Bonds
- Stocks
- Options
- Credit
- Forex
39Standard Approach
40Modern Approach
Financial Institution