Title: Risk Measurement and Management
1Risk Measurement and Management
2Measuring Holding-Period Risk
- Price sensitivity of bonds is measured in terms
of a bond price elasticity - This elasticity is called duration denoted d1,
which is widely used by bond traders and analysts
and is often available on quote sheets
3Example of Duration
- Assume a 10-year 8 coupon bond is priced at 12
yield to maturity and has value of 77.4 and
duration of 6.8 - If yields changed immediately from 12 to 10,
that is a 2/112 or 1.8 change in gross yield - The bond price should change about
1.8 6.8 12.1
4Duration as Time Measure
- In 1930s, Macauley noted that maturity was not
relevant measure of timing of payments of bonds
and defined his own measure, duration - The definition of duration is (19-4)
5Duration has two interpretations
- Elasticity of bond prices with respect to changes
in one plus the yield to maturity - Weighted average payment date of cash flows
(coupon and interest) from bonds - Duration measure
- Can be modified to be a yield elasticity by
dividing by (1yield to maturity) - can be redefined using term structure of yields
(Fisher-Weil duration noted d2)
6Duration Calculations
- Duration can be calculated for bonds
- For level-payment loans (e.g. mortgages)
7Duration is an Approximation
Derivative is used in calculating duration
Price (Par1.0)
Actual price change
Change predicted by duration
0
Yield to Maturity
8Properties of Duration
- Can be interpreted as price elasticity or
weighted average payment period - Note when c0 that d1 M
- When M is infinite d1 (1i)/i
- Duration measure effect of parallel shift in
interest rates - Other economic risks are not assessed
9Duration as Risk Measure
- Good
- Balances reinvestment yield risk against capital
gains risk - Widely used and clear mathematical expression
assessing holding-period yield risk - Bad
- Approximation and theoretical issues
- Convexity adjustment only approximate improvement
10Asset Liability ManagementDefinitions
- Approach to balance sheet management including
financing and balance sheet composition and use
of off-balance sheet instruments - Assessment or measurement of balance sheet risk,
especially to interest rate changes - Simulation of earnings performance of a portfolio
or balance sheet under a variety of economic
scenarios
11History of ALM
- After World War II to mid 1960s
- ASSET MANAGEMENT
- Interest rates stable, large post-war holdings of
government bonds, deposit markets protected - Mid 1960s to late 1970s
- LIABILITY MANAGEMENT
- Interest rates rising, global financial markets
developing (e.g. Eurodollars), regulation binding
(maximum deposit interest rates)
12History of ALM (continued)
- Late 1970s to present
- ASSET/LIABILITY MANAGEMENT
- Use balance sheet composition or off-balance
sheet instruments to management interest rate and
other economic risks - Changing markets - increased competition from
non-banks, foreign institutions - Goverment concerns - SL failures, Continental
Bank and Texas banks, etc.
13Measurement of Risk of Balance Sheet
- Maturity gaps are common way to assess the
sensitivity of a balance sheet to changes in
interest rates - Assets and liabilities classified by maturity or
repricing interval - Cumulative gap calculated
- Not easy to interpret in terms of risk
14Duration of Balance Sheet
- Duration of a number of assets is
- Duration of net worth in a portfolio is
15Simulation
- Computer simulation can handle more complex
economic changes - Many simulations can assess sensitivity of
earnings to changes - Regulators require and consultants can apply
16Managing Interest Rate Risk
- Change balance sheet composition
- Adjust assets and liabilities until dE is at
acceptable level - Use futures or options to adjust next exposure
- What is source of value added?
17Can Risk Management Add Value?
- Return to risk-free portfolio is the risk-free
rate - Investors can manage their own interest rate risk
- Does risk distract management or prevent
exploitation of competitive advantage? - Pleasing regulators and better understanding may
be biggest advantage of ALM
18Risk Management
- Balance sheet management
- ALM
- Duration and immunization
- Off balance sheet
- Futures
- Options
- Swaps
19Types of Derivative Contracts
- Three basic types of contracts
- Futures or forwards
- Options
- Swaps
- Many basic underlying assets
- Commodities
- Currencies
- Fixed incomes or residual claims
20Managing Risk with Futures
- Offset price or interest rate risk with contract
which moves in opposite direction - Cross diagonally in the box
- Identify contract with price or interest rate
which moves as close as possible with the price
or interest rate exposure - Imperfect correlation is basis risk
- Not using futures or forwards can be speculation
21Hedging
Bank Planning to Borrow
Insurance Hedge
Borrowing Hedge
Insurance Company with Premiums
22Interest-Rate Options
- Interest rates and asset values move in opposite
directions - Long cash means short assets
- Short cash means long (someone elses) asset
- Basis risk comes from spreads between exposure
and hedge instrument - Problem with production risk
23Caps, floors, and collars
- If a borrower has a loan commitment with a cap
(maximum rate), this is the same as a put option
on a note - If at the same time, a borrower commits to pay a
floor or minimum rate, this is the same as
writing a call - A collar is a cap and a floor
24Collars Cap 6, floor 4
0
9400
9500
9600
Loss
25Options and Product Pricing
- Option pricing is well established technology
- Black-Scholes approaches
- Present value approaches
- Simulation
- In interest rates, lattice models used which are
consistent with interest rate movements - Can model any cash flow with combinations of
options
Rocket Science
26Replication Futures with Options
Profit
Profit
Buy Call
Long
0
0
P0
P0
Loss
Loss
Write Put
27Other option developments
- Credit risk options
- Casualty risk options
- Requirements for developing an option
- Interest
- Calculable payoffs
- Enforceable
28Swaps
- Exchange of future cash flows based on movement
of some asset or price - Interest rates
- Exchange rates
- Commodity prices or other contingencies
- Swaps are all over-the-counter contracts
- Two contracting entities are called
counter-parties - Financial institution can take both sides
29Interest Rate SwapPlain vanilla, LIBOR_at_5.5
1/2 5 fixed
Company A (receive floating)
Company B (receive fixed)
2.5mm
2.75mm
1/2 6-month LIBOR
Notional Amount 100 mm
30Issues in Hedging
- Micro-hedging versus macro-hedging
- Accounting
- Regulation
- Assumptions underlying hedging
- Market liquidity
- Covariance structure (second moments)
- Notorious examples
- PNC, IG Metall, Bankers Trust, Orange Cy,
Long-Term Capital Mgmt (LTCM), BancOne
31Overview of Credit Risk
- Usual interpretation of credit risk is default on
a loan or bond - New views of credit risk are focused on the
change in the credit-worthiness of debt
instruments as well as default - Risk changes will be reflected in the value of a
portfolio over time as write-downs or downgrades
short of default reduce value of claims
(mark-to-market view of risk)
32Default
- Private debt (corporate and household) may not
pay cash flows as promised - Late payments
- Nonpayment of interest or principal
- Other default or credit events
- Violation of covenants and other creditor
interventions in operations - Change in risk of default (e.g. highly leveraged
transactions)
33Credit Events
- Probability of default (PD) can change affecting
the value of default-risky securities - Upgrades and downgrades reflecting changes in PD
are credit events - Recent progress has been made in quantifying
these probabilities
34Bond and Debt Ratings
- Rating agencies
- Standard and Poors (AAA to D)
- Moodys (Aaa to C)
- Fitch and Duff and Phelps
- Migration of ratings, e.g. from BBB to BB
(investment grade to below investment grade)
represents credit risk - For example, change from BBB to BB has historical
probability of 5.3 (SP, 1996)
35Ratings and Defaults
36Risk of Fixed Incomes
Probability
Maximum valueF
Future Value of Debt
37Credit Losses
- Three elements in credit losses
- Estimated default probability (PD)
- Loss given default (LGD)
- Exposure at default (EAD)
- Credit losses PDLGDEAD
- Investors in debt securities will be concerned
about all these elements in managing their risks
38Credit Risk Analysis
- Credit risk has become a major focus of rating
agencies, regulators, and investors - Very important to capital market development
(e.g. asset securitizations, loan syndications) - Enron, Global Crossing, and GE exemplify
different stages of concern with these issues - Consulting industry in credit analysis
- RiskMetrics (formerly J.P. Morgan)
- KMV (academic based research)
- Others (KPMG, PricewaterhouseCoopers, etc.)
39Credit Risk Assessment
- Default occurs when value of assets less than
value of liabilities (insolvency) - Example of analysis used by KMV uses simplified
estimates of variables - Must calculate market value of assets (market
value of debt and equity) and variability of
market value - Identify book value of liabilities
40Motorola Debt and Equity
Total Market Value
41Distance to Default Example
- Motorola 2001-II (billions) Value of long-term
debt 7.3 Book value of current
liabilities 12.9 Total value of
liabilities 20.2 Market value of assets
56.6 Standard deviation of change in market
value 16.4 - Market value ? standard deviation of percent
change 9.3 billion
42Reduced Probability of Default?
- Estimated default point in example is midway
between book value of current liabilities and
long-term debt - Theory is that long-term debt does not require
immediate payment, short-term liabilities may
allow some flexibility - KMV uses historical data to fine-tune this
estimate
43Estimated Distance to Default
Market value to default point 40.0
56.6
20.2
12.9
TMV
CLLTD
CL
Default point (estimated as midpoint) 16.6
44Distance to Default 12-31-01
- Total Value of Assets (from Capital Structure
and Financial Statements) E LTD CL
TA33.9 8.1 9.7 51.7 - Book value of LTD and CL 8.4 and 9.7Midpoint
estimate of default point 13.9Std Dev 16.4
51.7 8.48
45Probability of Default
- KMV has used historical data to relate distance
from default to probability of default - That measure is proprietary (not available)
- As example, Motorola is rated A3 by Standard and
Poors, historically associated with a default
rate of about .82 over next five years (.61 in
Moodys experience)
46Private Firm Default Risk
- KMV estimates non-traded firm risk by using
market-traded comparables - Data base on 35,000 traded firms globally
- Valuations of private firms and risk estimated by
using EBITDA/Assets ratios - KMV estimates default probabilities for private
firms based on data on 300,000 firms in 30
countries - Estimates depend on EBITDA??0
47Credit Risk in Portfolios
- Individual assets have probability of default and
risk and discussed last week - Loans in portfolios will have an interdependent
risk structure due to correlations in defaults - Credit risk within portfolio context is a major
advance in credit risk management - Search for a summary measure of portfolio risk
led to the concept of value at risk
48Value at Risk (VAR)
- Value at risk (VAR) looks at risk of portfolio
accounting for covariance of assets - Risk is defined in terms of likelihood of losses
49VAR and Capital
B
Capital
50Portfolio Credit Risk
- Credit risk different than usual portfolio risk
analysis - Returns are not symmetric
- Concentrations of exposure complicate losses
- Major issue is correlation of defaults and losses
given default - We will discuss approach followed by
CreditMetrics - Other approaches exist (including KMV)
51Credit Risk as Rating Changes
- Increased credit risk Default
CCC B BB - Same credit risk (BBB) BBB
- A AA
- AAA
- Less credit risk
-
-
52Rating Migrations (BBB rating)
Source Standard Poors
53Two Bond Rating Migrations
54Probability of Default Two Firms
Value of Firm B
Probability 1/2
Probability 1/10
Probability 1/100
Default Point B
Value of Firm A
Default Point A
55Loss Given Default
56Simplified Road Map
Compute exposure profile Of each asset
Compute the volatility Of value caused by Up
(down)grades and defaults
Compute correlations
Portfolio value-at-risk due to credit
Source Introduction to CreditMetrics (1997)
57Required Resources
- Default probabilities (or ratings)
- Migration probabilities
- Historical data requirements
- Approaches to estimating correlations
- Complete data on types of credits and estimations
of losses given defaults - Exposures to classes of risks
- Models and simulations of value changes given
credit events
58Credit Portfolio Risk
One Asset
Many Assets
Frequency
Frequency
0
0
Return
Return
59Incremental Risk
- Introduction to CreditMetrics provides good
examples (in Section 5) - Importance portfolio risk is the marginal risk
- Marginal risk considers portfoliorisk
implications
10
High risk and large size
?
10mm
Credit Exposure
60Example Portfolio
Source Creditmetrics Technical Document (April
2, 1997)
61Credit Risk Management
- Derivatives Single-name v. multi-name
- Types of credit derivatives
- Total return swap
- Credit risk swap
- Credit risk option
- Credit inter-mediation swap
- Credit spread derivative
- Default substitution swap
- Over 400 billion notional amount 2000-IV
62Hedging Credit Risk
Hedging Instrument Payoff
Change in Portfolio Value
0
Risky Outcomes
63Example of Total Return Swap
- 3-year 8 coupon bond
- If default probability increases from 10 to 20,
bond return is 8 - 6.4537 1.5463 (coupon
minus loss due to downgrade)
64Total Return Swap
(8-6.5437)
Company A (pay total return)
Company B (pay fixed)
154,626
750,000
7.5
Notional Amount 10 mm
65Total Return Swap
- Difference between payments and receipts by total
return receiver is compensation for risk - Total return payer receives cash in case of
downgrade as in example, subsidizing loss
realized on balance sheet - Can have other swap types, as in default swap
66Limitations of Derivatives
- Market limited to single name and portfolio
instruments - Typically individual corporate borrowers
- Some portfolio of commercial loans
- Market not developed for consumer credit
- Growth of consumer market but most
risk-management consists of sales of loans - Global market ready for consumer-risk derivatives
67For Next Classes
- Prepare First American Bank Credit Default Risk
case for November 9 - Read Chapters 23 and 24 for discussion in class
on November 9 and November 16 - Read KMV paper and Creditmetrics paper before
November 16 class - Teams should schedule appointments with me