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FIN 685: Risk Management Larry Schrenk, Instructor
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Course Details What is Risk? What is Risk Management? Introduction to VaR Sources of Market Risk
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Course Details
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Course Pages – http://auapps.american.edu/~schrenk/FIN685/FIN685.htm http://auapps.american.edu/~schrenk/FIN685/FIN685.htm Class – Lecture 5:30 PM to 8:00 PM – Review/Excel and Office Hours 8:00 PM+ Exams 3; Excel Projects 1; Case 1
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MSF, not MBA, Course Statistics Finance – Derivatives Mathematics Economics Accounting
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Philippe Jorion, Financial Risk Manager Handbook (FRMH)
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P ART I: R ISK IN G ENERAL 1. What is Risk? How Do We Measure It?FRMH 10, 11 2. How Do We Deal with Risk? Why Should We Care?FRMH 12, 13 P ART II: D EALING WITH R ISK 3. DependenciesTBA 4. The World of Monte Carlo–Simulation, not GamblingFRMH 4 5. The Hot Techniques: Value at Risk (VaR), etc.FRMH 14, 15 Exam 1 (through Topic 4) P ART III: S PECIFIC A PPLICATIONS 6. Credit Risk IFRMH 18, 19 7. Credit Risk IIFRMH 20, 21 8. Credit Risk IIIFRMH 22, 23 9. Operational Risk FRMH 24 Exam 2 (through Topic 8) 10. Liquidity Risk FRMH 25 11. Managing Risk across the FirmFRMH 16, 26 12. Our Friends in BaselFRMH 29, 30 Exam 3 (through Topic 12); Case and Projects Due
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1. Probability MeasuresFRMH 2 2. Linear RegressionFRMH 3 3. Time Value of Money and BondsFRMH 1 4. Stocks, FX, CommoditiesFRMH 9 5. Exam 1, No Review 6. Derivatives: IntroductionFRMH 5 7. Derivatives: Black-ScholesFRMH 6 8. Derivatives: Binomial ModelFRMH 6 9. Exam 2, No Review 10. Fixed-IncomeFRMH 7 11. Fixed-Income DerivativesFRMH 8 12. Exam 3, No Review
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Global Association of Risk Professionals (GARP)GARP – Financial Risk Manager Certificate Financial Risk Manager Certificate Professional Risk Managers’ International Association (PRMIA)PRMIA – Professional Risk Manager Certificate Professional Risk Manager Certificate
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What is Risk?
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Uncertainty: Ignorance – I have no idea what a box may contain. Risk: ‘Distributional’ Knowledge – I may not know which color I will get, but I know that the probability is 50-50 for each color. – Risk Rational Expectation
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Risk is… – The possibility that the actual (or realized) result may deviate from the expected result. Financial Risk is (often)… – The possibility that the actual (or realized) return may deviate from the expected return.
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Different Risks; Different Possibilities Greater/Lesser Risk; Greater/Lesser Deviation Upside and Downside Risk
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Stages of Risk Analysis 1. Identify Exposure 2. Measure Amount 3. Price
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Identify risk exposure – Profit of a firm Input price changes Labor problems Shifts in consumer tastes – Bond Interest rate risk Default risk – Foreign investment Exchange rate risk Result: Asset exposed to risks X, Y, etc.
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Measure/quantify the risk – ‘Cardinal Ordering’ – Use of statistics – Historical volatility/standard deviation – Correct measure of specific risks Result: Asset exposure to risk X is 8 units.
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Price the Risk – Compensation for specific level of risk. – Return, not dollar, compensation – Higher risk higher return Result: Asset exposure to 8 units of X risk yields a risk premium of 10%. Recall: Risk premium = E[r] – r f
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1. Risk Exposure: Return Volatility 2. Risk Measure: Standard Deviation 3. Risk Price: 1% risk premium per 2% Standard Deviation Alternate: CAPM
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Past Data – Historical prices – Forward-looking data – Assumption: Future behaves like past Statistical Distribution – Distribution, – Mean, – Variance, etc.
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Historical Data: – Normally distributed, = 10%, = 20% Forecast – E[r] = 10% – Confidence intervals, standard error, etc.
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Criteria – Monotonicity – Sub-additivity – Positive homogeneity – Translation invariance
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Expression – If portfolio Z 2 always has better values than portfolio Z 1 under all scenarios then the risk of Z 2 should be less than the risk of Z 1.
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Expression – Indeed, the risk of two portfolios together cannot get any worse than adding the two risks separately: this is the diversification principle.
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Expression – Loosely speaking, if you double your portfolio then you double your risk.
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Expression – The value a is just adding cash to your portfolio Z, which acts like an insurance: the risk of Z + a is less than the risk of Z, and the difference is exactly the added cash a.
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References: – Artzner, P., Delbaen, F., Eber, J.M., Heath, D. (1997). Thinking coherently. Risk 10, November, 68-71 – Artzner, P., Delbaen, F., Eber, J.M., Heath, D. (1999). Coherent measures of risk. Math. Finance 9(3), 203-228
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What is Risk Management?
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Natural ▪ Engineered ▪
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Market Risk Liquidity Risk Operational Risk Inflation Risk Default Risk – ‘risk-free asset’
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The uncertainty of an instrument’s earnings resulting from changes in market conditions such as the price of an asset, interest rates, market volatility, and market liquidity.
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Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) – Diversification – Market versus Non-Market Risks – Beta
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Market ( =1)▪ >1 < 1
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Beta Return rMrM rfrf 01 Risk Free Asset Market
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Number of Stocks Volatility of Portfolio Market Risk Non-Market Risk
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Notional Amount Sensitivity Analysis – Inputs – VaR Scenario Analysis – Events
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Value-at-Risk (VaR)
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Sensitivity Measure ‘Worst-Case-Scenario’ Downside Risk Only Lower Tail 1/100 Year Flood Level
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Value at Risk… – The maximum dollar amount that is expected to be lost over X time at Y significance. – EXAMPLE: VaR = $1,000,000 in the next month at 99% significance. Expectation (typically) relative to historical performance of assets(s).
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Risk -> Single number Firm wide summary – Handles futures, options, and other complications Relatively model free Easy to explain Deviations from normal distributions
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Financial firms in the late 80’s used it for their trading portfolios JP Morgan, 1990’s – RiskMetrics, 1994 Currently becoming: – Wide spread risk summary – Regulatory
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Basel Capital Accord – Banks encouraged to use internal models to measure VaR – Use to ensure capital adequacy (liquidity) – Compute daily at 99 th percentile – Minimum price shock equivalent to 10 trading days (holding period) – Historical observation period ≥1 year
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Historical simulation – Good – data available – Bad – past may not represent future – Bad – lots of data if many instruments (correlated) Variance-covariance – Assume distribution, use theoretical to calculate – Bad – assumes normal, stable correlation Monte Carlo simulation – Good – flexible (can use any distribution in theory) – Bad – depends on model calibration
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At 99% level, will exceed 3-4 times per year Distributions have fat tails Probability of loss – Not magnitude
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Mark to market (value portfolio) – 100 Identify and measure risk (future value) – Normal: mean = 100, std. = 10 over 1 month Set time horizon of interest – 1 month Set confidence level: – 95%
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Portfolio value today = 100 Normal value (mean = 100, std = 10 per month), time horizon = 1 month, 95% VaR = 16.5 0.05 Percentile = 83.5
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Measure initial portfolio value (100) For 95% confidence level, find 5 th percentile level of future portfolio values (83.5) The amount of this loss (16.5) is the VaR What does this say? – With probability 0.95 your losses will be less than 16.5
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Increase level to 99% Portfolio value = 76.5 VaR = 100-76.5 = 23.5 With probability 0.99, your losses will be less than 23.5 Increasing confidence level, increases VaR
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Holding period – Risk environment – Portfolio constancy/liquidity Confidence level – How far into the tail? – VaR use – Data quantity
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Benchmark comparison – Interested in relative comparisons across units or trading desks Potential loss measure – Horizon related to liquidity and portfolio turnover Set capital cushion levels – Confidence level critical here
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Uninformative about extreme tails Bad portfolio decisions – Might add high expected return, but high loss with low probability securities – VaR/Expected return, calculations still not well understood – VaR is not Sub-additive
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A sub-additive risk measure is Sum of risks is conservative (overestimate) VaR not sub-additive – Temptation to split up accounts or firms
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Sources of Market Risk
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Currency Risk Fixed-Income Risk Equity Risk Commodity Risk
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