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David C. Shimko

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RAROC (risk-adjusted return on capital) is simply return on risk capital, or return on VAR ... VAR is the best (sometimes only) way to measure capital ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: David C. Shimko


1
RAROC, Credit and Corporate Growth
  • David C. Shimko
  • Harvard University and
  • Risk Capital Mgmt, Inc.
  • Risk Management Workshop
  • Hebrew University
  • November 10, 1999

2
OUTLINE OF SEMINARS
  • Part I
  • Theoretical foundations of RAROC as a determinant
    of discount rates
  • Part II
  • Application of VAR and RAROC to nonfinancial
    firms
  • BREAK (required by Geneva Convention Rules)
  • Part III
  • Paradoxes in counterparty credit risk management

3
Part I Theoretical foundations of RAROC as a
Determinant of Discount Rates
4
CAPM Approach Simplified
  • Everyone prefers to avoid risk.
  • When risk reduction costs nothing, as in the case
    of diversification, people diversify as much as
    possible.
  • Some risks, called systematic risks, can never be
    diversified, because they affect such a large
    number of investments.
  • Whenever a risk cannot be diversified, investors
    must be paid a price to bear the risk.
  • Consequently, any diversifiable risk has no price
    in the CAPM
  • Capital markets are competitive (an assumption)
  • Capital is never scarce at the right price (an
    assumption)
  • Any temporary risk premium for diversifiable risk
    is eliminated by competition among investors

5
Components of the CAPM return
  • ri rf ?i(rm - rf) 0

Diversifiable risk premium
Risk-free return
Market risk premium
Expected return on any asset i
Scaled covariance between asset risk and
systematic risk
6
Generalizations to the basic CAPM
  • Most empirical tests reject the basic form of the
    CAPM
  • Robert Merton (Nobel prize winner with Fischer
    Black) developed the intertemporal CAPM in 1973
  • This model allows for nondiversifiable changes in
    investment opportunities
  • This creates a larger set of nondiversifiable
    risks
  • Each of these risks earns its own risk premium
  • There is still no compensation for diversifiable
    risk
  • Steve Ross (future Nobel prize winner) developed
    the Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) in 1976
  • The APT does not explain the source of risk
    premia
  • But the APT (in portfolio form) does rely on
    asset diversification and a zero risk premium for
    diversifiable risk

7
Conclusion for CAPM and related models
  • None of these models allows a risk premium for
    diversifiable risk
  • The financial models as a class differ from
    insurance models of risk pricing
  • Select any introductory insurance textbook (e.g.
    Goovaerts et al)
  • Typical expression of the pricing of risk for an
    insurance company
  • (on a single policy)
  • ri ? k?

Volatility of loss
Scaled by diversifiability Scaled by size of
portfolio Scaled by concentration
Required reserve on a liability
Capital availability factor
Expected loss
Are the insurance models completely wrong?
8
What is risk capital, and how is it measured?
  • CONCEPTS DEFINITIONS
  • Risk capital is the amount of money one is
    prepared to lose on a trade, portfolio, or
    strategy
  • Often termed value-at-risk (VAR)
  • VAR is a better measure of capital than capital
    itself
  • RAROC (risk-adjusted return on capital) is simply
    return on risk capital, or return on VAR
  • Definition RAROC PL/VAR
  • COMPARISON TO THE SHARPE RATIO
  • RAROC is similar to the Sharpe Ratio (invented by
    William Sharpe)
  • RAROC can be applied more broadly than the Sharpe
    Ratio

9
Whats a good RAROC?
Historical performance of SP 500
Typical hedge-fund ex-ante investment criterion
RAROC Sharpe x (?t)/z t VAR period in
years z std devs in VAR
10
Components of the RAROC return
  • ri rb k?

Return on any asset
Marginal risk of asset relative to benchmark
Capital scarcity factor (RAROC)
Return on benchmark
11
Can RAROC be reconciled with the CAPM?
  • Loosen one of the CAPM assumptions
  • What if capital is somehow constrained in a
    market?
  • Legal constraints such as bank regulations
  • Psychological constraints such as fears of
    emerging market investments or commodities
  • Asymmetric information constraints
  • Corporations cannot fully/credibly communicate
    investment prospects
  • Investors restrict capital they will invest
  • When capital is constrained
  • The unconstrained investors are relatively
    over-exposed to the constrained asset
  • They demand a risk premium because of their
    concentrated, undiversified positions
  • Competitive forces fail to eliminate the risk
    premium

12
How is the RAROC risk premium determined?
  • Assume investors will invest in a passive
    benchmark
  • (This is a recursive process the benchmark
    investors may also earn a premium for
    diversifiable risk)
  • Also assume that capital available to take
    nonbenchmark risks is further constrained
  • Then investors will diversify nonbenchmark risks
    to the degree possible
  • But they will not be able to diversify fully
  • Hence they demand a risk premium for these risks
  • Competition cannot eliminate this risk premium

13
Implications for corporate investment
  • Every project has benchmark and non-benchmark
    risks
  • Determine scaled benchmark return
  • Is RAROC appropriate?
  • Compare firms investment opportunities to its
    asset base
  • Examine competitor financial strength
  • Assess markets appetite for risks associated
    with the project
  • Identify external investment constraints, legal,
    psychic or structural
  • If yes
  • Determine appropriate RAROC
  • Assess volatility due to non-diversifiable
    non-benchmark risks
  • If no
  • Use CAPM-style approach
  • But please note
  • The CAPM is a special case (or limiting case) of
    the RAROC approach

14
Part II Application of VAR and RAROC to
Nonfinancial Firms
15
Introduction
  • What is enterprise-wide risk management?
  • A computer system that tracks and measures
    business risks for management reporting
  • A conceptual framework for risk-based
    decision-making across the firm
  • Some large users of EWRM
  • Bankers Trust
  • Enron
  • Microsoft
  • Different applications, common goals
  • A price for risk
  • A way to trade off one risk against another
  • Comparisons between different risk-mitigation
    alternatives
  • Achieving the proper balance between risk and
    return

16
An example of risk-based decision-making
  • The basic NPV rule (accept all trades with
    positive NPV) often leads to underperformance
  • Positive NPV is neither necessary nor sufficient
    condition for the acceptance of a project or
    activity
  • Scarce resources must be properly deployed
  • People
  • Market Coverage
  • Risk capital

Is the firm using risk capital INEFFICIENTLY? or
EFFICIENTLY?
Maximum NPV
Cumulative profitability
Max resource
Use of resource
17
Optimizing with scarce resources A mathematical
view
  • Problem Maximize expected NPV over time
    (Objective)
  • Subject to a constraint on resource use
    (Resource use ? Available)
  • Equivalent to
  • Maximize Objective minus Multiplier x (Unused
    resource level)
  • s.t. Multiplier x Unused resource 0
  • Interpretation of the (LaGrange) multiplier
  • Value of relaxing the constraint
  • Shadow price of the scarce resource
  • Interpretation in management
  • Multiplier Optimal transfer price
  • Apply NPV rule with transfer price
  • Noncash charge to projects
  • Insures projects are adopted optimally
  • Does it matter if your scarce asset is labor or
    risk capital?

18
Opening Pandoras box
  • What is the right RAROC for a nonfinancial firm?
  • Does this change the way we look at capital?
  • Can RAROC ever have an effect on shareholder
    value?
  • A CASE STUDY IN ENERGY

19
Determining the right RAROC for a firm
  • Constructive approach
  • Closed form is hopeless
  • Simulate different acceptance rules
  • Requires knowledge of stochastic and dynamic
    opportunity set of investments available to the
    firm over time
  • Comparison to peers
  • Pure plays (in and outside the industry)
  • Integrated energy firms
  • An internal risk capital market
  • Business units trade risk capital with each other
  • RAROC is the clearing price
  • We chose the comparison to peers approach

20
A sample of 1998 energy peer RAROCs
1998 RAROC
Company
RAROC
Enron
93
Duke
53
Williams
75
Annualized
Trading Gains

Reliant
53
99 VaR
(MM)
Utilicorp/Aquila
55
KN Energy
92
DTE Energy
22
Sempra
-19
PGE
-4
21
Risk-Return Relationship
Relationship Between Risk and Trading Gains in
1998
Increasing RAROC
Enron
Annual Trading Gains (MM)
Duke
Williams
KN Energy
Reliant
Aquilla
DTE
0
PGE
Sempra
0
Annual Value at Risk, 99 Conf (MM)
22
Separating capital and risk capital charges
Example
OLD WAY OF THINKING
NEW WAY OF THINKING
100 in SP
100 in SP
100 risk-free cash investment (6)
Expected return on SP 12
Expected return on T-bills 6
25 risk capital (24 RAROC)
Worst case loss (1 yr) 25
6
6
Expected cash return 12
Expected cash return 12
23
Real Example How Enron evaluates a tolling deal
Forecast NPV _at_ 10.6
Frequency Chart
5,000 Trials
63 Outliers
.025
125
.019
93.75
.013
62.5
.006
31.25
.000
0
-150,000
0
150,000
300,000
450,000
Certainty is 79.16 from 0 to Infinity
Worst case loss ? 90,000
Expected NPV ? 105,000
Not bad
INVESTMENT
YIELD
Cash 380,000
IRR 16.5
RAROC 52.3
Risk Capital 90,000
Yowza!
24
How can RAROC lead Enron to better decisions?
  • Pricing strategy
  • RAROC criterion provides more pricing flexibility
    in a competitive market (in this case)
  • Hedging strategy
  • Under a RAROC criterion,
  • hedges may sacrifice NPV...
  • but increase returns by reducing dependence on
    risk capital
  • Under traditional capital budgeting, hedges are
    never worthwhile unless they have positive NPV
  • Traders will be rewarded for putting on efficient
    futures hedges and offsetting OTC deals --- this
    increases RAROC
  • Comparables
  • With a RAROC criterion, the tolling deal can be
    compared on equal footing to any trade or asset
    deal
  • Example How would the the tolling deal have
    compared with purchasing a gas-fired power plant?

25
RAROC answers the question Should I hedge?
NPV Rule
RAROC Rule
Unhedged deal
Expected Profitability
Hedge market risk
Hedge credit risk
0
Insure all risks
Value-at-risk (all sources)
26
Prepay deal
  • Typical industry view No hedge, no deal
  • Prepay valued as debt substitution
  • May crowd out balance sheet to the extent ratings
    agencies impute operational risk
  • Otherwise, no additional capital costs required
  • How could RAROC help on a prepay?
  • Deciding whether to hedge and how to hedge
  • Prepays may be a more efficient means to obtain
    long-term exposures
  • Deciding when to purchase others prepay
    contracts
  • Integrating credit and market risk
  • Major competitive advantage Linking financing
    to sellers

27
Main reasons banks and energy firms use RAROC
  • Proper RAROC analysis prevents wasting risk
    capital on low-value (but positive NPV) deals
  • VAR is the best (sometimes only) way to measure
    capital
  • RAROC can be applied consistently across trading
    and asset businesses to ensure optimal capital
    allocation
  • RAROC can be applied within a trading business to
    grow profitable activities at the expense of less
    profitable ones
  • Risk control allows firms to leverage more of
    their core expertise in origination, marketing,
    and market development
  • Investors evaluate banks energy company
    performance relative to peers partly on RAROC
    analysis

28
How does Microsofts risk analysis differ from
others?
  • Bankers Trust and Enron have similar risks
  • Market risk
  • Liquidity risk
  • Credit risk
  • For Microsoft, other risks are more important
  • Competitive risks
  • Operational risks
  • Legal risks
  • Should Microsoft use RAROC?
  • In EWRM, all risks are treated equally to the
    extent they risk the same amount of capital
  • A common language for risk and risk measurement
    leads to better decision-making
  • Pricing, project origination and performance
    measurement

29
Two uses of RAROC
  • As a ratio
  • RAROC ranks relative performance
  • Trading desk makes 50 MM and risks 80 MM for a
    RAROC of 62.5
  • Asset business makes 30 MM on a 100 MM
    investment that can be sold for 60 MM in the
    worst case RAROC 75
  • Banks tend to find this implementation easier
  • As a measure of value-added
  • NPV Usual NPV minus risk charges
  • Risk charges Corporate RAROC x VAR
  • Suppose corporate RAROC 40
  • Trading desk adds
  • 50 - 40 of 80 18 MM
  • Asset business adds
  • 30 - 40 of 40 14 MM
  • Risk-adjusted NPV or Risk-adjusted EVA
  • Energy firms tend to find this implementation
    easier

30
What do firms need to do to establish EWRM?
  • LAY THE FOUNDATIONS...
  • Analytical risk assessment systems are needed
  • High quality analytic staff
  • AND ERECT THE STRUCTURE
  • Integrated VAR framework for all trades,
    financing and asset deals
  • Market risk (paper/physical)
  • Credit risk
  • Operational risk and competitive risk
  • VAR-based risk reporting (usu. daily frequency)
  • VAR-based trading limits and capital allocation
  • Establishing a culture of efficient risk-taking
  • Exposure at all levels of management
  • Risk-based decision-making
  • RAROC-based performance measurement and
    compensation

31
A successful organizational structure
  • Chief Risk Officer independent of business
  • Head of risk management committee
  • Report to CEO (in some cases, the Board of
    Directors)
  • Responsible for
  • Capital allocation/budgeting of risk capital
  • Trading and non-trading businesses
  • Establishment of benchmarks
  • Integrity of risk systems
  • Performance measurement
  • Risk and performance reporting
  • CROs office contains the following functions
    (large org.)
  • Head of compliance
  • Head of risk operations
  • Head of research/analytics

32
Recommended next steps for EWRM implementers
  • This presentation discussed the whats and whys
  • Next examine the hows carefully
  • Measuring VAR in the trading books and asset
    businesses
  • Reporting
  • Applying asset allocation to risk limits
  • Applying RAROC consistently to project evaluation
  • Establishing benchmarks by business
  • Ensuring systems efforts are consistent with
    long-term organizational goals
  • Expose decision-makers at all levels to RAROC and
    risk-aware decision-making

33
Part III Paradoxes in Counterparty Credit Risk
Management
34
Example Pricing options into swap contracts
  • Assumptions (using an electric power example)
  • Fixed price power contract with no options is
    worth 25/MWh
  • Independent modeling suggests option is worth
    1/MWh
  • Value-at-risk on the fixed price contract is
    15/MWh
  • Value-at-risk on the fixed price contract with
    swings is 18/MWh
  • Required return on risk capital of 20 (30-day
    VaR)

35
Incorporating VaR into swap bid/offer
  • Case I Bid/offer for a single undiversified
    trade
  • Fixed price firm 2515(0.20) 22,28
  • With option 25118(0.20) 22.4,29.6
  • Case II Warehousing period of one week
  • Fixed price firm 2515(0.20)?0.25 23.5,26.5
  • With option 25118(0.20)?0.25 24.2,27.8
  • Case III Small trade, fully diversified
  • Fixed price firm 25,25
  • With option 26,26
  • GENERAL STATEMENTS
  • Swap bid offer must contain not only option
    values, but charges for marginal risk.
  • Concentrations of unidirectional options require
    higher risk charges.

36
What does this mean for credit?
  • Credit risk must be computed and charged against
    risk capital
  • Same rules apply
  • Single nondiversified exposure gets high charge
  • Diversified credit exposures minimize credit
    charges if credit risks are independent
  • Credit risk does not diversify market risk
  • Risks are multiplicative, i.e. contract in the
    money together with counterparty default
  • So what is a swap really?
  • The agreement to exchange cash flows subject
    to...
  • Each counterpartys right to default on this
    obligation along with their collective
    obligations
  • Option may not be exercised optimally in the
    narrow sense
  • What is collateral really?
  • The striking price of the default option

37
Putting it all together
  • Credit risk is a combination of two embedded
    options
  • The embedded option increases value-at-risk to
    both parties to the swap
  • Joint collateral holdings reduce credit risk by
    making the default options more out-of-the-money
  • Hence, good collateral management at sufficiently
    high levels can hedge most of the credit risk
  • And thereby reduce the necessary capital charges
    for credit risk

38
You could build a great model...
  • Bid Q
  • (?Cu)C(XC)
  • ?SP(XS)
  • ?a
  • k IV(XS,XC)
  • ? IXS
  • NOTES
  • Subscript C indicates counterparty, S indicates
    self
  • Probability of counterparty default is based on a
    credit rating plus an uncertainty premium u
  • The call and put options decrease in value as
    collateral X increases
  • Price of default-free contract
  • Probability of counterparty default x price of
    call option
  • Probability of own default x price of put
    option
  • Admin costs per unit
  • Charges for incremental risk capital
  • Charges for incremental collateral

39
But it would be wrong.
  • Credit risk ultimately is extremely difficult to
    model.
  • Not because of the analytic complexity of credit
    risks, fat tails, correlations and aggregation
  • But because of structural inefficiencies in the
    balance sheet credit methods
  • INEFFICIENCY 1
  • Everyone pays his counterpartys cost of credit
  • INEFFICIENCY 2
  • One can never know ones counterpartys
    nondisclosed risks
  • Market risks (LTCM)
  • Credit risks (The US Power Industry)

40
Whats wrong with paying the other guys credit
costs?
  • Trade subsidization
  • Higher quality credits effectively pay for lower
    quality credits to trade with them
  • Incentive for all to seek higher credit quality
    counterparty
  • HOW TO AVOID PAYING THESE COSTS
  • A. Price swaps to reflect counterparty credit
    quality
  • B. Dont trade
  • C. Dont charge traders for credit risk

41
Cant we estimate nondisclosed risks?
  • That would be very difficult.
  • Risks change constantly
  • Risks sometimes change, unknown to counterparty
  • Incentives
  • A counterparty of equal credit rating should only
    trade with you if he believes his hidden risks
    are greater than you realize
  • You realize this
  • You resist trading with those who would trade
    with you

42
Where does this leave us?
  • There are serious shortcomings of even the most
    sophisticated practices
  • Inability to determine hidden credit exposures of
    counterparties
  • The best credit manager and the best credit
    analytics cannot solve these problems

43
A humble suggestion
  • Post collateral to cover all counterparty
    obligations to all other counterparties
  • In this system, everyone pays their own credit
    costs
  • Do you think collateral is expensive?
  • It is under the current system
  • Why is collateral so inefficient?
  • Lack of uniform collateral collection
  • Unnecessary transfer costs between custody banks
  • Limits to rehypothecation of collateral
  • Eligibility
  • Permission of issuing institution
  • Letters of Credit and Third Party Guarantees
  • Inability to post collateral on a hedged or
    diversified basis

44
Introducing the CoVar project at Bankers Trust
  • First application in the energy industry
  • Solves four major collateral problems
  • Lack of uniform collateral collection
  • Centralized reconciliation and messaging
  • Unnecessary transfer costs between custody banks
  • Keeps collateral at participants custody bank
    until default
  • Limits to rehypothecation of collateral
  • Standardizes eligible collateral
  • Retains and reassigns LCs and TPGs by book entry
  • Inability to post collateral on a hedged or
    diversified basis
  • CoVars secret
  • Collateral solutions imply credit solutions
  • For more information
  • www.COVAR.com
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