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Overview on Methods on Quantitative Risk Management QMF 06, Sydney Gerhard Stahl, BaFin Präsentationtitel | 11.12.2017 | Seite 1.

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Presentation on theme: "Overview on Methods on Quantitative Risk Management QMF 06, Sydney Gerhard Stahl, BaFin Präsentationtitel | 11.12.2017 | Seite 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Overview on Methods on Quantitative Risk Management QMF 06, Sydney Gerhard Stahl, BaFin
Präsentationtitel | | Seite 1

2 Agenda Market risk Credit risk OpRisk Banks and Insurances
Präsentationtitel | | Seite 2

3 Cross-sectional supervision activities by QRM
on-site examinations of internal models: Banks Funds Insurers market risk models TB (Amendment to Basel I, since 1998) interest rate risk banking book (since 2004) internal ratings (Basel II IRBA, since 2005) OpRisk (Basel II AMA, since 2006) hedge funds (DerivateV/OGAW-RL, since 2004) since 2005 (pre-visits) potentially: Solvency II (starting ) Präsentationtitel | | Seite 3

4 What is Risk Management Process about?
Risk policy People buy-in CRO Board sponsor OBJECTIVES Strategy and KPIs TIME COST EMBED VALUES Impact Risks ERM/CRSA Threats Opportunities Management Identification Assessment Review Präsentationtitel | | Seite 4

5 Where did regulators came from?
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6 Why basing regulation on Internal Models?
Spot Futures, FRA‘s Swaps Options Exotics, Structured Deals Structured credit, credit derivatives Gapping & Duration MtM & modified duration First-order Sensitivities Volatility, delta, gamma, vega, theta Correlations, basis risk Model risk (inc. smiles, calibration) Präsentationtitel | | Seite 6

7 Today: VaR based regulation
Where did regulators came from? regulatory starting point: STANDARDIZED METHODS = simple scenarios (8%) Simpler then SPAN, the margin system of CME HEAD paper bridges the past to the future => relevancy 4. In Germany 16 have an approval for int. models Präsentationtitel | | Seite 7

8 Backtesting the Market Risk Amendment
Clean vs. dirty P&L Exclusion of exponential weightings, hybrid models Backtesting methods too simplistic EC and VaR for 10 trading days (partial view) incentive structure is ok – SM much higher RC difficult to define steering clearly – use test regulation neglects more timeline information through audits Process focused regulation – neither rules nor principles Präsentationtitel | | Seite 8

9 Time series for P&L and - VaR
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10 Annotations to HEAD – what is a good risk measure?
SM are weakly coherent Backtest-ability Clear substantial meaning Robustness good scaling behavior (time, level of significance, portfolios, ...) - risk silos, different users Valuation of assets is key (marked to market, marked to model, best estimate,…) There is no one size fits all measure of risk What is gained if instead of a PD an ES is determined??? Präsentationtitel | | Seite 10

11 Which models are in place?
The Winner: Historical Simulation Monte-Carlo-Simulation Delta-Gamma Approaches (REAL TIME VaR) Präsentationtitel | | Seite 11

12 Cont. One period bottom-up models Assumptions:
Square-root of time scaling Aggregating silos by the assumption of uncorrelated- ness Mapping error, approximation error, estimation error, numerical errors Market data of high quality Marked-to-market (model) valuation Often crude methods for pricing model errors Stress tests depend on models Präsentationtitel | | Seite 12

13 Portfolio Tree Trading Book Präsentationtitel | | Seite 13

14 Credit Risk Credit risk is key for the business model of a universal
bank Hence, for core credit segments (retail, corporates, banks,…) rating models were established long before Basel II Rating systems actually in place were not implemented from scratch Typically, they are a hybrid models blending the existing ones with newer approaches (external data, KMV, RiskCalc, statistical models) Präsentationtitel | | Seite 14

15 B1 : Equity Capital Ratio
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16 Data Quality poor data quality of ratios
ratios out of annual balance sheet are characterized by numerous and extreme outliers in approx. 30% of all observations at least one ratio is outside of the 1% or 99% quantile ratios of the qualitative section are in some cases significantly beyond the respective range Only 20-30% were complete an error free Präsentationtitel | | Seite 16

17 Bagplot of Balance sheet data
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18 Estimates by QRM Präsentationtitel | | Seite 18

19 Influence of outliers on PD
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20 OpRisK - Database Modelling
Data Model Control Environment Factors Operational Loss Data Key Control Indicators data sources: internal data external consortium external collection of publicly known cases Präsentationtitel | | Seite 20

21 LDA : Stochastic Modelling
Severity Frequency Extreme Value Theory OpVaR issues: extrapolation beyond experience (to the 1000-year event) how to “back-test” “merging” of internal and external data, bias removal infinite mean models? Präsentationtitel | | Seite 21

22 almost all data external
facts: almost all data external three models: internal, logNormal, Pareto 1000-year event (regulatory capital) at the edge of the experience (all external data combined!) 5000-year event (economic capital) is beyond any experience Präsentationtitel | | Seite 22

23 Current state of OpRisk modelling at banks ...
... lags business practice in P/C insurance: little to none explicit modelling of accumulation alias dependencies little to none modelling of “exposure” (tiny step would be to replace gross loss modelling by loss ratios) little to none modelling of “explaining variables” (e.g. US versus non-US business) risk models are qualitatively ill-prepared to allow optimization of insurance coverage no modelling of “reserve risk” Präsentationtitel | | Seite 23

24 Similarities and differences
goals for internal models in Solvency II are similar to the goals and principles of the regulatory approval of internal models for the market risk in the trading books of banks but: there are significant differences in the risk management practices: Very similar models used in banking In contrast a variety of risk measures is used by insurance undertakings: TailVaR (beyond the 100-year-event) VaR (1400-year-event) 2 x VaR (100-year-event) Präsentationtitel | | Seite 24

25 The “back-testing” challenge
Banking Insurance Profits and losses are computed daily for the trading book VaR models for market risk can easily be 'back-tested' Using modern statistical techniques, the quality of 99%-VaR models, which predict the 100-day-event, can be assessed using about 100 daily data points. A completely different solution to back-testing needs to be found for Solvency II. Quarterly or, more commonly yearly profit and loss data 200 years are needed to assess the quality of a model that predicts the 200-year-event. Präsentationtitel | | Seite 25

26 The “back-testing” challenge
Solution is to decouple the 'back-testing' from the risk measure that defines the SCR calibration standard. Assessment of the methodological basis in the 'statistical quality test' needs to be based on actually observed losses Example: The worst-ever NatCat event (Katrina) is now considered to be roughly a 35-year-event ->‘back-testing‘ needs to be based on the 5 - to 25-year-events. (Corresponds to the 80%- to 96%-VaR, if expressed as a risk measure.) The gap between observable losses and the extreme events defining the SCR is bridged by assumptions on the shape of the probability distribution of (gross) losses: pooled industry data / constrained calibration / peer review Präsentationtitel | | Seite 26

27 Similarities and Differences
Similarities / Synergies similar products: structured products interest rate and credit derivatives similar tools and models: market risk (Black-Karasinski) credit risk (CreditMetrics) Banks / Basel II insurers / Solvency II input-oriented partial models (market and ratings) shorter horizons aggregation of risk numbers in market risk: thousands of risk drivers or simple „earnings at risk” absolute risk measure output-oriented holistic modeling longer horizons aggregation of distributions King’s road: small number of accumulation events, which explain losses at the group level risk relative to a benchmark (RNP) Präsentationtitel | | Seite 27

28 Investment funds, banks, insurers
complexity of products re-insurers derivates houses hedge funds insurers banks funds complexity of risk drivers market risk + credit risk + exotic deriv. (e.g. whether) + insurance risks + longer time horizons  more uncertainty Präsentationtitel | | Seite 28

29 Präsentationtitel | 11.12.2017 | Seite 29


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