Title: Zvi Wiener
1Financial Risk Management
- Zvi Wiener
- 02-588-3049
- http//pluto.mscc.huji.ac.il/mswiener/zvi.html
2Risk
- Business Risk
- Operational Risk
- Financial Risk
- credit risk
- market risk
- liquidity risk
- Legal Risk
3- Crouhy, Galai, Mark, Risk Management, McGraw
Hill, 2000. - Golub, Tilman, Risk Management Approaches for
Fixed Income Markets, Wiley, 2000. - Jorion, Value at Risk, McGraw Hill, 1997.
- http//www.gloriamundi.org
- http//www.riskmetrics.com
- http//www.bis.org
- http//www.garp.com
4Derivatives 1993-1995
- ( million)
- Shova Shell, Japan 1,580
- Kashima Oil, Japan 1,450
- Metallgesellschaft 1,340
- Barings, U.K. 1,330
- Codelco, Chile 200
- Procter Gamble, US 157
5Barings
- February 26, 1995
- 233 year old bank
- 28 year old Nick Leeson
- 1,300,000,000 loss
- bought by ING for 1.5
6Public Funds
- ( million)
- Orange County 1,640
- San Diego 357
- West Virginia 279
- Florida State Treasury 200
- Cuyahoga County 137
- Texas State 55
7Orange County
- Bob Citron, the county treasures
- 7.5B portfolio (schools, cities)
- borrowed 12.5B, invested in 5yr. notes
- interest rates increased
- reported at cost - big mistake!
- realized loss of 1.64B
8Financial Losses
- Barings 1.3B
- Bank Negara, Malaysia 92 3B
- Banesto, Spain 4.7B
- Credit Lyonnais 10B
- SL, U.S.A. 150B
- Japan 500B
9Metallgesellshaft
- 14th largest industrial group
- 58,000 employees
- offered long term oil contracts
- hedge by long-term forward contracts
- short term contracts were used (rolling hedge)
- 1993 price fell from 20 to 15
- 1B margin call in cash
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11Risk Management andRisk Measurement
12Basic Statistics
- Certainty and uncertainty
- Probabilities, distribution, PDF, CDF
- Mean, variance
- Multivariable distributions
- Covariance, correlation, beta
- Quantile
131 100 2 50 3 50
(1005050)/3 66.67 km/hr.
141.41.10.51.2 0.924
0.981.010.991.01 0.9897
15Probabilities
- Certainty
- Uncertainty
- Probabilities
16Probabilities
17Probabilities
0.3
0.2
0.1
1 2 3 4 5
18Probabilities
0.3
0.2
0.1
1 2 3 4 5
19Probabilities
20Probabilities
21Sample Estimates
Sometimes one can use weights
22Normal Distribution N(?, ?)
23Normal Distribution N(?, ?)
24Normal Distribution
quantile
25Lognormal Distribution
26Covariance
- Shows how two random variables are connected
- For example
- independent
- move together
- move in opposite directions
- covariance(X,Y)
27Correlation
- -1 ? ? ? 1
- ? 0 independent
- ? 1 perfectly positively correlated
- ? -1 perfectly negatively correlated
28Properties
29Time Aggregation
Assuming normality
30Time Aggregation
- Assume that yearly parameters of CPI are
- mean 5, standard deviation (SD) 2.
- Then daily mean and SD of CPI changes are
31Portfolio
- ?2(AB) ?2(A) ?2(B) 2?(A)?(B)?
32?
33?12
?2
?
John Zerolis "Triangulating Risk", Risk v.9
n.12, Dec. 1996
?1
34Useful Books
- Duffie D., Dynamic Asset Pricing Theory.
- Duffie D., Security Markets, Stochastic Models.
- Shimko D. Finance in Continuous Time, A Primer.
Kolb Publishing Company, 1992.
35Binomial Tree
1.0
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37Example
- We will receive n dollars where n is determined
by a die. - What would be a fair price for participation in
this game?
38Example 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.
39Example
- If there is a pair of dice the mean is doubled.
- What is the probability to gain 5?
40Example
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
41Example
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
42Additional 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
43Additional 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
44Example 1
-2 -1 0 1 2 3
45Example 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
46PL
- 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
47Example 1 (2 cubes)
48Example 1 (5 cubes)
49Breakfast
50 50
50Lunch
50 50
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52Breakfast
2 4 5 7 9 11 13 15
50 50
Lunch
50 50
? 11 ? ??
53Correlation ?1
Breakfast
50 50
Lunch
50 50
54Correlation ?-1
Breakfast
50 50
Lunch
50 50
55Correlation ?0
Breakfast
50 50
Lunch
50 50
56How much can we lose?
- Everything
- correct, but useless answer.
- How much can we lose realistically?
57What is the current Risk?
- duration, convexity
- volatility
- delta, gamma, vega
- rating
- target zone
- Bonds
- Stocks
- Options
- Credit
- Forex
58Standard Approach
59Modern Approach
Financial Institution
60Value
dollar
Interest Rate
interest rates and dollar are NOT independent