Title: Risks of Financial Intermediation
1Risks of Financial Intermediation
2Common Risks
- All Financial Intermediaries face similar risks
from their operations. - The importance of each type of risk depends upon
the intermediary and business lines - We will spend today introducing the types of risk
present. The remainder of the semester is spent
detailing each type of risk and discussing
management techniques used by firms to limit the
impact of each risk.
3Margin Income
- Most financial institutions serving an
intermediary role make some income from interest
margins.
4Interest Rate Risk
- The Interest rates on both Assets and Liabilities
are tied to the length of the commitments. - Interest rate risk results from a mismatch in
maturities of assets and liabilities. - Refinancing risk.
- Reinvestment risk.
5Interest Rate Risk Refinancing Risk
- Assume you have 100 million in liabilities
financed at 9 per year and the rate that you pay
resets at the end of the year. Your FI also has
100 million in assets that mature in 2 years
paying 10 per year. - What happens if the interest rate increases?
6Interest Rate RiskReinvestment Rate Risk
- Assume you have 100 million in liabilities
financed at 9 per year that mature in 2 years.
Your FI also has 100 million in assets that
mature in 1 years financed at a cost of 10 per
year. - What happens if the interest rate decreases?
7Matching Maturities
- It is difficult for the FI to match maturities
and it may not eliminate interest rate risk
anyway
8Interest Rate RiskMarket Value Risk
- Market value is tied to the level of interest
rates. - As rates increase market value decreases, as
rates decrease market value increases - The impact of rate changes is tied to maturity
9Market Risk
- The combination of interest rate, foreign
exchange, and equity return risks are combined
with an active trading strategy.
10Credit Risk
- Risk that promised cash flows are not paid in
full. - Firm specific credit risk
- Systematic credit risk
- High rate of charge-offs of credit card debt in
the 80s and 90s - Obvious need for credit screening and monitoring
- Diversification of credit risk
11Off-Balance-Sheet Risk
- Risk associated with contingent claims that do
not show up on the balance sheet. It is not on
the Balance sheet since it does not involve
holding a current primary claim or issuing a
current secondary claim.
12Technology and Operational Risk
- Risk of direct or indirect loss resulting from
inadequate or failed internal processes, people,
and systems or from external events. - Some include reputational and strategic risk
- Technological innovation has seen rapid growth
- Automated clearing houses
- CHIPS
13Technology and Operational Risk
- Technology Risk Technology investment may fail
to produce anticipated cost savings. - Operational Risk The risk that support systems
(often based on new technology) may break down. - Bank of New York failed to register incoming
payments on Fedwire, but continued to process
outgoing payments - Wells Fargo Failure to correctly post deposits
to acquired firms account holders cost 180
Million
14Economies of Scale and Scope
- Economies of Scale
- Economies of Scope
15Foreign Exchange Risk
- Foreign Assets and Foreign Liabilities change in
value with changes in exchange rates. - Net Long Asset Position
- Net Short Asset Position
16Foreign Exchange Risk
- Returns on foreign and domestic investment are
not perfectly correlated. - FX rates may not be correlated.
- Example /DM may be increasing while /
decreasing.
17Foreign Exchange Risk
- Note that hedging foreign exposure by matching
foreign assets and liabilities requires matching
the maturities as well. - Otherwise, exposure to foreign interest rate risk
is created.
18Country or Sovereign Risk
- Result of exposure to foreign government which
may impose restrictions on repayments to
foreigners. - Lack usual recourse via court system.
19Liquidity Risk
- Risk of being forced to borrow, or sell assets in
a very short period of time. - Low prices result.
- May generate runs.
20Insolvency Risk
- Risk of insufficient capital to offset sudden
decline in value of assets or liabilities. - Original cause may be excessive interest rate,
market, credit, off-balance-sheet, technological,
FX, sovereign, and liquidity risks.
21 Risks of Financial Intermediation
- Other Risks and Interaction of Risks
- Interdependencies among risks.
- Example Interest rates and credit risk.
- Discrete Risks
- Example Tax Reform Act of 1986.
22Macroeconomic Risks
- Increased inflation or increase in its
volatility. - Affects interest rates as well.
- Increases in unemployment
- Affects credit risk as one example.
- Changes in Consumer Confidence
- Changes in home building
23Risk Management Techniques
- Deciding what risks to accept and how to manage
them - Set Asides
- Limits on Risky Positions
- Hedging
- Business Lines vs. Total Operations
24Risk Measurement Tools
- Value at Risk and Earnings at Risk
- Models that predict the probability and magnitude
of potential loss from market risk - Stress Testing
- What is the worst case Scenario?
- GAP, Duration GAP
- Financial Statement Analysis
- Impact of Regulation
25Consolidated Risk Management
- A coordinated process of measuring and managing
risk on firmwide basis.
26Benefits of Consolidating Risk Management
- Diversification benefits are ignored without
consolidation, leading to increased risk
management costs - Lack of coordination can increase firm wide risk
in times of market problems (unwinding similar
position in different business lines for
example).
27Barriers to Consolidated Risk Management
- Consolidation of financial firms has produced
increased product and geographic diversification
which has made business wide risk management more
difficult. - Information Costs
- The cost of integrating, recording and analyzing
risk across separate business lines.
28Barriers to Consolidated Risk Management
- Regulatory Costs
- Consolidation has created a framework where firms
are required to respond to multiple regulators. - Capital and Liquidity requirements may prohibit
the movement of funds from one business line to
another. - Cost associated with managing the separate
regulatory requirements including opportunity
costs