Www.prmia.org Managing Derivative Funding Risk - The FVA Debate An Industry Thought Leadership Forum.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright© 2003 John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Power Point Slides for: Financial Institutions, Markets, and Money, 8 th Edition Authors: Kidwell, Blackwell,
Advertisements

FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE, MINING AND COMMODITIES TRANSPORT TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION PHARMACEUTICALS AND LIFE SCIENCES Break out session:
Valuation of IR Derivatives in a new Regulatory Environment Speakers: Eduardo Pereira Risk and Regulation Specialist: Bloomberg L.P Bernardo Santos Andrade.
Etienne Koehler Barclays Capital CVA - VaR January 2012 Shahram Alavian Royal Bank of Scotland
New EU Rules on Derivatives Trading The EMIR Reporting Technical Standards Victoria Cooley OTC Derivatives & Post Trade Policy Financial Conduct Authority.
British Bankers’ Association CRD 3 and beyond How are you left? Simon Hills British Bankers Association.
Orion Karl Daley August – 2009
Issues in Counterparty Credit Risk David Lynch Federal Reserve Board Presentation to Quant Congress USA 2008 The views expressed in this presentation are.
Chapter 10 Derivatives Introduction In this chapter on derivatives we cover: –Forward and futures contracts –Swaps –Options.
AFGAP PRMIA– April, 5th The impact of funding liquidity on market products valuation A new paradigm? Alexandre Rameh The impact of funding liquidity.
FRM Zvi Wiener Following P. Jorion, Financial Risk Manager Handbook Financial Risk Management.
Analysis of Sberbank’s proposal to issue new shares
Global money management, transfer pricing, other tax issues (D/R, p.552, pp , Head §12.1, (p. 183, pp ) Global financial management:
Questions About (OTC) Clearing Craig Pirrong Bauer College of Business University of Houston.
8.1 Credit Risk Lecture n Credit Ratings In the S&P rating system AAA is the best rating. After that comes AA, A, BBB, BB, B, and CCC The corresponding.
Chapter Six: Credit Risk Management. Business Risk Operational Risk Financial Risk Technology and operations outsourcing Derivatives documentation and.
FRM Zvi Wiener Swaps.
FRM Zvi Wiener Following P. Jorion, Financial Risk Manager Handbook Financial Risk Management.
Risk Management in Financial Institutions (II) 1 Risk Management in Financial Institutions (II): Hedging with Financial Derivatives Forwards Futures Options.
© 2002 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 10 Foreign Exchange Futures.
American Municipal Power – Ohio, Inc. AMERICAN MUNICIPAL POWER – OHIO, INC. (AMP-Ohio)
Interest Rate Risk. Interest Rate Risk: Income Side Interest Rate Risk – The risk to an institution's income resulting from adverse movements in interest.
Global Financial Services Outline –Why and how U.S. banks engage in international banking –Foreign banks in the U.S. –International lending –Foreign exchange.
6-0 Finance Chapter Six Swaps. 6-1 Finance 457 Chapter Outline 6.1 Mechanics of interest rate swaps 6.2 The comparative-advantage argument 6.3 Swap.
Importance of Valuations – and All Other Inputs - in OTC Derivatives Collateral Management Scott Linden Derivatives Collateral Management Services.
Swap’s Pricing Group 5 Rafael Vides Aminur Roshid Youmbi Etien Kalame.
BASEL II - WHERE TO NOW? Andrew Jennings January 2009.
Financial Collapse Destruction of Wealth Collapse of Banks Falling Housing Prices Freezing Credit Markets Attributable to Credit Default Swaps?
Principles of foreign exchange Chapter 4. Overview Trading one currency for another arises from the elements that make up a nation’s balance of payments:
Danny Corrigan CEO, CME European Trade Repository ACI Russia General Assembly 29 May 2014 CME GROUP – FX Futures.
IBA International Financial Law Conference – May, 2015
4. Money market International financial services 1
Swaps Chapter 26. Swaps  CBs and IBs are major participants –dealers –traders –users  regulatory concerns regarding credit risk exposure  five generic.
Credit Valuation Adjustments Some Risk Management and Measurement Issues from a Regulatory Perspective Dr. Colin Lawrence and Dr. Nat Benjamin Prudential.
Pension Plan Reporting Graeme Robertson, Vice President Damon Williams, Vice President Phillips, Hager & North Investment Management Ltd. Pension Plan.
1 OUTLINE FOR CHAPTER 19 Understand Repositioning of Funds –Constraints on Moving of Funds –Ways to Transfer Funds –Unbundling –What to do if Funds are.
Markets in Financial Instruments Directive Chris Bates September 2005 Interaction with the CRD.
Chapter 14 Financial Derivatives. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.14-2 Hedging Engage in a financial transaction that reduces or eliminates.
1 Cross Border Financial Positions and Exposures Juan Pablo Graf Banco de México.
Strengthening the resilience of the banking sector1 Proposed changes to Counterparty Credit Risk in Basel Accord Presentation to PRMIA/ISDA seminar London,
Dealing Rooms since the Financial Crisis Dr Yves Wagner The Director’s Office LIA October 2009 The Asset Managers’ and Institutional Investors’ Perspective.
1. Che Sidanius Advisor Financial Stability ‘I think there is a world market for maybe five computers’ 2 - Thomas Watson (1943), Chairman of IBM.
Transaction Exposure Risk due to lags in payments Hedging strategies October 27, 20151Transaction Exposure.
The Clearing Corporation: Best Practices August 11, 2005.
+ OTC Derivative Clearing Summary Making Great Ideas Become Reality”
Kirt C. Butler, Multinational Finance, South-Western College Publishing, 2e 20-1 Chapter 20 Currency Swaps and Swaps Markets 20.1Parallel Loans: Necessity.
Derivatives ECD Exchange Cleared Derivatives: Credit PREPARED FOR: SII Eliminating Counterparty Risk in OTC Derivatives DATE: 26 th January 2009.
SWAPS Types and Valuation. SWAPS Definition A swap is a contract between two parties to deliver one sum of money against another sum of money at periodic.
Computational Finance Lecture 1 Products and Markets.
CHAPTER 11 FUTURES, FORWARDS, SWAPS, AND OPTIONS MARKETS.
Andrew Baum and David Hartzell, Global Property Investment, 2011 Property derivatives – an introduction.
Chapter 15: Financial Risk Management: Concepts, Practice, & Benefits
Expanding Access to Canadian Derivatives Clearing.
SESSION 6: ESTIMATING COST OF DEBT, DEBT RATIOS AND COST OF CAPITAL ‹#› Aswath Damodaran 1.
Introduction to Swaps, Futures and Options CHAPTER 03.
Introduction of Credit Default Swaps R N Kar Reserve Bank of India.
Ukraine (nr 46514): Expert Mission on Supervision of Investment Funds` Activities - TAIEX Risk management process. Techniques, tools and other arrangements.
COMESA MONETARY INSTITUTE TRAINING ON MACROPRUDENTIAL POLICY TOOLS RELEVANT FOR COMESA MEMBER COUNTRIES WORKSHOP II: DSIBS FRAMEWORK SOLUTIONS.
1 ISDA presentation at Gretai Securities Market International Bond Market Conference 2009 Jeffrey Kan Operations Director, Asia Pacific November 20, 2009.
Valuation of IR Derivatives in a new Regulatory Environment
FVA - Putting funding into the equation
OUTLINE FOR CHAPTER “19” Read pages and
The Clearing Corporation of India Ltd.
Chapter 9 OIS Discounting, Credit Issues, and Funding Costs
In-House Training for 2016 Customised in-house training courses for banks, other financial institutions, end-users of OTC derivatives, third-parties and.
Segregated Accounts on the Derivatives Market.
Summary Collateral Collateral Definition
Counterparty Credit Risk in Derivatives
12 Multinational Capital Structure & Long Term Financing
Repricing Swaps & OIS Discounting
Presentation transcript:

Managing Derivative Funding Risk - The FVA Debate An Industry Thought Leadership Forum

Managing Derivative Funding Risk - The FVA Debate Professor Moorad Choudhry – Treasurer, Corporate Banking Division, The Royal Bank of Scotland Alexander Sokol – CEO, CompatibL and Founder, Numerix Etienne Koehler - Head of CVA Risk Modeling, HSBC Robert McWilliam – Managing Director, Global Head of CVA Desk & Collateral, ING Bank

Managing Derivative Funding Risk - The FVA Debate Impact of collateral, CCP and bilateral initial margin Alexander Sokol, Numerix/CompatibL PRMIA London October 31, 2012

“Trading desk” view of FVA ●These slides define FVA narrowly as the expected value of deal costs not already included in MtM and CVA ○The meaning of this definition radically depends on which methodology is accepted by the firm for MtM (OIS or LIBOR discounting) and for CVA (unilateral or bilateral) ●Total economic effect of the deal for the desk is then MtM + CVA + FVA ○In many jurisdictions, only MtM and CVA can be treated as P&L under accounting rules

“Trading desk” view of FVA contd. ●Additional assumptions implicit in this practical definition of FVA ○Hedging with another counterparty is included only to the extent it is already part of the firm’s definition of MtM (e.g. OIS discounting is based on the assumption that the hedge is funded by collateral posted under perfect CSA) ○Any excess funding is provided by the firm’s funding desk

Purpose of this definition ●This definition of FVA tells the desk what the difference is between (a) the total cost of managing the deal through maturity, and (b) the sum of MtM and CVA they can book as P&L according to the firm’s accounting rules ○We do not consider the complex arguments related to shareholder value etc. ○Desk here refers generically to all desks which trade with this counterparty, but not the funding desk or the rest of the firm

Traditional bilateral collateralization ●Under traditional bilateral collateralization (e.g. CSA), counterparties post collateral based on current exposure for each netting set ○Collateral agreement may be unilateral (one party posts collateral) or bilateral (both parties post collateral) ○Collateral is posted on net basis – one party is posting and the other receiving; parties do not hold each other’s collateral ○Collateral is posted for exposures above a threshold

CCP initial margin requirement ●Central clearing reduces credit risk but imposes new funding costs via overcollateralization (initial margin) ○To reduce credit risk, central clearing requires the firm to post more collateral than the exposure to cover for possible sudden exposure increase in a crisis ○The funds for collateral must be borrowed on the open market, but receive lower CSA rate (usually the OIS rate) ○This eliminates CVA but creates FVA cost in its place

BCBS margin proposal (BCBS226) ●Proposal to require margins based on both potential future exposure (initial margin) and current exposure (variation margin) for non-cleared OTC trading ○Initial margin should be exchanged by both parties, without netting of amounts collected by each party (i.e. on a gross basis). Amounts legally segregated or held by custodian. ○Very limited allowance for netting ○Quantitative models or schedule for initial margin; models calibrated to the period of stress to reduce procyclicality

FVA and CSA with thresholds ●CSA or other “less than perfect” agreements include thresholds which reduce the amount of collateral relative to perfect CSA ○Funding cost (benefit) relative to OIS discounted MtM for the side receiving (posting) collateral ○FVA moves the total in the direction from OIS discounted price to unsecured (“LIBOR”) discounted price

FVA and overcollateralization ●CCPs and BCBS 226 proposal require overcollateralization; the amount of collateral exceeds that of perfect CSA ○Excess amount of collateral must be borrowed in the market creating a new funding cost relative to OIS discounted MtM ○This funding cost may exceed the benefit from the elimination of CVA, however CVA impact is part of P&L but FVA is not, creating a large P&L impact immediately due to the different accounting treatment

PRMIA panel discussion Managing Derivative Funding Risk - The FVA Debate 31st October 2012 Etienne Koehler (University of Paris 1 La Sorbonne)

13 Hull and White’s position FVA = interest payments made above the risk free rate interests on the money borrowed to manage a portfolio. 1.Discount must be done at the risk-free rate because it is required by the risk- neutral valuation principle 2.If a dealer takes into account the DVA of the funding strategy, then the FVA disappears, since FVA= DVA of the funding strategy 3.The DVA of the funding strategy is a benefit to shareholders, so it should be taken into account 4.Even if a dealer does not take into account the funding strategy’s DVA, there is no need for an FVA

14 Some industry responses 1.Risk-free rate Why not for the “building block” but one calibrates expressions of the form ZC Bond * expected forward 2.If a dealer takes into account the DVA of the funding strategy, then the FVA disappears, since FVA = DVA of the funding strategy Theoretical computations say yes (e.g., cf. Morini) 3.The DVA of the funding strategy is a benefit to shareholders - At least it shows a better balance sheet, hence better dividends, etc. - What is the point if you have to wait for default to realize DVA? - Buying back your debt probably not realizable more than once 4.Even if a dealer does not take into account the funding strategy’s DVA, there is no need for an FVA Not clear. True in the bilateral case as FVA ≈ 0 Link between hedging and FVA?

15 Disclaimer The views and opinions expressed in this presentation are those of the author alone and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of HSBC Investment Bank, its subsidiaries or affiliates. HSBC BANK PLC REGULATED BY FSA REGISTERED IN ENGLAND NO REGISTERED OFFICE: 8 CANADA SQUARE, LONDON, E14 5HQ, UNITED KINGDOM MEMBER HSBC GROUP

This event was kindly sponsored by