Risk Management
Risk Management Readings “Beyond Value at Risk” Kevin Dowd Wiley 1998 “Mastering Risk Volume 1 and 2” FT Prentice Hall 2001 “Risk Management for Company Executives” John Smullen FT Prentice Hall 2000
Risk Management Readings “The Revolution in Risk Management” Anthony Santomero in “Mastering Finance” FT Prentice Hall 1998 “A Brief History of Downside Risk Measures” David Nawrocki Journal of Investing 1999
Lecture Summary The Nature of Risks The Measurement of Risk Attitudes to Risk
The Nature of Risk
A Story In 1530 Atahuallpa defeated his half brother Huascar to gain control of the Inca Empire He had conquered what he thought was the overwhelming bulk of the civilised world and ruled an Empire some have compared to the Roman Empire in Size He let Francisco Pizarro with 100 soldiers and 60 horsemen meet him at the village of Cajamar which he surrounded with 40,000 troops The Spanish were surrounded but they attacked and killed 6-7,000 within a day. That led to the demise of the Inca Empire
Risk Related Thoughts Lightning Strikes The Arrogance of Success Leads to Risk Taking Cultures may be Brittle Other individuals and organisations may see things radically differently Technological Change can have major impacts
Risk and Finance
Is there a Valuable Distinction Between Risk and Uncertainty ?
The Continuum of Risks A Sensible Vision of Outcomes and Their Probabilities - Day to Day Movements in Equities A Sensible Vision of Outcomes but not Their Probabilities - Collapse in Housing Market No Vision of Outcomes or their Probabilities - Chicago Board of Trade 1992
The Sources of Risk Market Risk - Interest Rate, Forex, Commodity, Equity, Liquidity Risk (?), etc. Credit Risk - Risk of Counterparty Default Operational Risk - All other Risks
Market and Credit Risk Knowledge Of Outcomes Knowledge of Probabilities
Operational Risk Knowledge Of Outcomes Knowledge of Probabilities
Risk Measurement and Attitudes to Risk
Risk Measures and Attitudes to Risk Returns in % terms reflecting distribution from which returns drawn Year A B E(Ra) = 9.7SD(Ra) = 2.61 E(Rb) = 9.2SD(Rb) = 2.87
Consider Data on Last Slide and Evaluate the Nature of the Choice between the two distributions of Returns ?
Attitudes to Risk Utility Function - Defined over a probability distribution of returns. Mean and Variance - an approximation see Blake pp Time Higher Moments Downside Measures Psychological Issues
Real Returns on US Assets
Higher Moments r Mr = 1/N (xi –E(xi)) i = 1 N
Moments – To what extent is investor utility defined over moments 1 st. Mean 2 nd. Variance 3 rd. Skewness – Degree of Asymmetry 4 th. Kurtosis – Degree of Peakedness
Downside Measures Worst Case Value at Risk Lower Downside Moments Extreme Values
VAR Definition The Value at Risk (VAR) is the level of expected loss over a given time horizon which will only be exceeded in a specified proportion of instances. J.P.Morgan’s 4.15 Report
Definitions and Measures of Risk Likelihood Return a x 0 y
Definition of VAR Absolute VAR = (0 - x) Relative VAR = (y - x)
Expected Tail Loss When the outturn is worse than the VAR cut-off value what is the average loss Focuses on tail of distribution Better on discontinuous distributions
Key Choice Parameters Time Period Confidence Level
Time Period Liquidity of Portfolio Regulatory Framework Measurement Technique – Does one Assume Normality How does one deal with portfolio composition Required Data for Testing
Confidence Level Risk Management/Capital Requirement Regulatory Requirement (1%) Testing – Higher so more extreme observations Accounting and Comparison
Measuring Value at Risk Variance/Covariance Historical Monte Carlo Simulation
Issues with Value at Risk and ETL How does it deal with non-normality? How does it deal with financial crises ? How does it deal with shifting parameter values? What types of risk is it best applied to? If distributions are normal VAR and ETL are just a multiples of the standard deviation
Risk Measures and Attitudes to Risk Asset AB E(R) SD(R) rd.Moment(44.54)(5.25) 4 th. Moment Worst Case25 Semi-Variance VAR(-0.3)3.2 ETL25
Psychological Issues Economic Man Cognitive Dissonance Depends on Situation Too focused on Recent Data
Adjusting Expectations Expectation Time A B
Definition and Measurement of Risk Distributional Measures of Risk Calculus Based Measures of Risk Some Speciality Measures like Gap Analysis for Particular Risks
Calculus Based Measures of Risk
Derivative Measures of Risk Underlying Risk Factor Value of Financial Obligation a b
Calculus Based Measures of Risk First Derivative measures the rate with which the value of an obligation changes with changes in an Underlying Risk Factor Second Derivative Measure how sensitive is the First Derivative Measure to changes in the Underlying Risk Factor
Issues in Relation to Calculus Calculus Based Measures Need to Specify Mathematical Relationship so require a Pricing Model - Bond Valuation, Option Pricing Models Thus difficult to apply to complicated portfolios of obligations Applies to Localised Measurement of Risk An approximation of the function
Summary The Nature of Risk The Attitude towards Risk The Measurement of Risk