Description
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- Contents
- Foreword
- Introduction
- Preface
- Chapter 1 The Need for Risk Management Systems
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Historical Evolution
- 3. The Regulatory Environment
- 4. The Academic Background and Technological Changes
- 5. Accounting Systems versus Risk Management Systems
- 6. Lessons from Recent Financial Disasters
- 7. Typology of Risk Exposures
- 8. Extending Risk Management Systems to Nonfinancial Corporations
- Notes
- Chapter 2 The New Regulatory and Corporate Environment
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Group of 30 (G-30) Policy Recommendations
- 3. The 1988 BIS Accord: The “Accord”
- 4. The “1996 Amendment” or “BIS 98”
- 5. The BIS 2000[sup(+)] Accord
- Notes
- Chapter 3 Structuring and Managing the Risk Management Function in a Bank
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Organizing the Risk Management Function: Three-Pillar Framework
- 3. Data and Technological Infrastructure
- 4. Risk Authorities and Risk Control
- 5. Establishing Risk Limits for Gap and Liquidity Management
- 6. Conclusion: Steps to Success
- Notes
- Chapter 4 The New BIS Capital Requirements for Financial Risks
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Standardized Approach
- 3. The Internal Models Approach
- 4. Pros and Cons of the Standardized and Internal Models Approaches: A New Proposal—the “Precomm
- 5. Comparisons of the Capital Charges for Various Portfolios According to the Standardized and the I
- 6. Conclusions
- Notes
- Chapter 5 Measuring Market Risk: The VaR Approach
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Measuring Risk: A Historical Perspective
- 3. Defining Value at Risk
- 4. Calculating Value at Risk
- 5. Conclusion: Pros and Cons of the Different Approaches
- Appendix 1: Duration and Convexity of a Bond
- Notes
- Chapter 6 Measuring Market Risk: Extensions of the VaR Approach and Testing the Models
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Incremental-VaR (IVAR), DeltaVar (DVAR), and Most Significant Risks
- 3. Introduction to Internal Risk Rating
- 4. Dynamic-VaR
- 5. Measurement Errors and Back-testing of VaR Models
- 6. Improved Variance-Covariance VaR Model
- 7. Limitations of VaR As a Risk Measure
- Appendix: Proof of the Deltavar Property
- Notes
- Chapter 7 Credit Rating Systems
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Rating Agencies
- 3. Introduction to Internal Risk Rating
- 4. Debt Rating and Migration
- 5. Financial Assessment (Step 1)
- 6. First Group of Adjustment Factors for Obligor Credit Rating
- 7. Second Group of Adjustment Factors for Facility Rating
- 8. Conclusion
- Appendix 1: Definitions of Key Ratios
- Appendix 2: Key Financial Analysis Measures
- Appendix 3A: Prototype Industry Assessment: Telecommunications in Canada
- Appendix 3B: Prototype Industry Assessment: Footwear and Clothing in Canada
- Appendix 4: Prototype Country Analysis Report (Condensed Version): Brazil
- Notes
- Chapter 8 Credit Migration Approach to Measuring Credit Risk
- 1. Introduction
- 2. CreditMetrics Framework
- 3. Credit VaR for a Bond (Building Block 1)
- 4. Credit VaR for a Loan or Bond Portfolio (Building Block 2)
- 5. Analysis of Credit Diversification (Building Block 2, Continuation)
- 6. Credit VaR and the Calculation of the Capital Charge
- 7. CreditMetrics As a Loan/Bond Portfolio Management Tool: Marginal Risk Measures (Building Block 2,
- 8. Estimation of Asset Correlations (Building Block 3)
- 9. Exposures (Building Block 4)
- 10. Conditional Transition Probabilities: CreditPortfolioView
- 11. Appendix 1: Elements of Merton’s Model
- Appendix 2: Default Prediction—The Econometric Model
- Appendix 3: Transition Matrix over a Period of Less than One Year
- Notes
- Chapter 9 The Contingent Claim Approach to Measuring Credit Risk
- 1. Introduction
- 2. A Structural Model of Default Risk: Merton’s (1974) Model
- 3. Probability of Default, Conditional Expected Recovery Value, and Default Spread
- 4. Estimating Credit Risk As a Function of Equity Value
- 5. KMV Approach
- 6. KMV’s Valuation Model for Cash Flows Subject to Default Risk
- 7. Asset Return Correlation Model
- Appendix 1: Integrating Yield Spread with Options Approach
- Appendix 2: Risk-Neutral Valuation Using “Risk-Neutral” EDFs
- Appendix 3: Limitations of the Merton Model and Some Extensions
- Notes
- Chapter 10 Other Approaches: The Actuarial and Reduced-Form Approaches to Measuring Credit Risk
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The Actuarial Approach: CreditRisk+
- 3. The Reduced-Form Approach or Intensity-Based Models
- Notes
- Chapter 11 Comparison of Industry-Sponsored Credit Models and Associated Back-Testing Issues
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Comparison of Industry-Sponsored Credit Risk Models
- 3. Stress Testing and Scenario Analysis
- 4. Implementation and Validation Issues
- Notes
- Chapter 12 Hedging Credit Risk
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Credit Risk Enhancement
- 3. Derivative Product Companies
- 4. Credit Derivatives
- 5. Types of Credit Derivatives
- 6. Credit Risk Securitization for Loans and High Yield Bonds
- 7. Regulatory Issues
- Notes
- Chapter 13 Managing Operational Risk
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Typology of Operational Risks
- 3. Who Should Manage Operational Risk?
- 4. The Key to Implementing Bank-Wide Operational Risk Management
- 5. A Four-Step Measurement Process for Operational Risk
- 6. Capital Attribution for Operational Risks
- 7. Self-Assessment versus Risk Management Assessment
- 8. Integrated Operational Risk
- 9. Conclusion
- Appendix 1: Group of Thirty Recommendations: Derivatives and Operational Risk
- Appendix 2: Types of Operational Risk Losses
- Appendix 3: Severity versus Likelihood
- Appendix 4: Training and Risk Education
- Appendix 5: Identifying and Quantifying Operational Risk
- Notes
- Chapter 14 Capital Allocation and Performance Measurement
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Guiding Principles of RAROC Implementation
- 3. Relationship of RAROC Capital to Market, Credit, and Operational Risks
- 4. Loan Equivalent Approach
- 5. Measuring Exposures and Losses for Derivatives
- 6. Measuring Risk Adjusted Performance: Second Generation of RAROC Model
- 7. Concluding Remarks
- Appendix 1: First Generation of RAROC Model—Assumptions in Calculating Exposures, Expected Default
- Notes
- Chapter 15 Model Risk
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Valuation Models and Sources of Model Risk
- 3. Typology of Model Risks
- 4. What Can Go Wrong?
- 5. What Can Market Risk Management Do to Mitigate Model Risk?
- 6. Conclusions
- Notes
- Chapter 16 Risk Management in Nonbank Corporations
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Why Manage Risks?
- 3. Procedure for Risk Management
- 4. Accounting Reports
- 5. Reporting Requirements by Securities Authorities
- Appendix 1: Examples of Reports on Risk Exposure by Nike, Merck, and Microsoft, 1988
- Notes
- Chapter 17 Risk Management in the Future
- 1. The Total Risk-Enabled Bank
- 2. External Client Profitability . . . A Partner Plus™ Approach
- 3. Process for Reviewing Risk in Extreme Markets Will Become Standardized
- 4. The Credit Analysis Process and the Need for Integrating Risks
- 5. An Idealized Bank of the Future
- Appendix: The Relationship Between Market Risk, Business Risk, and Credit Risk
- Notes
- References
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- Y
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