FRM Level 1 Part 1 Flashcards

1
Q

basis of risk management

A

definition: risk is exposure to uncertain, including loss and gains

expected vs unexpected loss
expected loss:
definition: consider how much an entity expects to loss in the normal business and daily life
feature:
as one of the costs of doing business, and it is priced into the products and services

unexpected loss:
definition: consider how much an entity could loss outside of the normal business and daily life
feature:
more difficult to predict, compute and pick-in in advance.

risk vs reward
a trade-off : a higher rate of return need assume more risk

risk management vs risk taking
risk management: how firms actively select the type and level of risk that it is appropriate for them to assume
risk taking: assume additional risk actively for additional gains

risk management process
step 1: identify the risk
step 2: measure and estimate risk exposure (assess effect of exposures)
find instrument and facilities to shift or trade risk (assess cost and benefits of instruments)
step 3: form a risk mitigation strategy: avoid, transfer, mitigate, keep
step 4: evaluate performance

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2
Q

measure and manage risk

quantitative measures

A

sensitivity measures
definition: examine how portfolio value respond to a small change in a single risk factor
equity exposure measure: Beta
fixed-income exposure measure: duration and convexity
option risk measures:
delta:
delta is a measure of the change in an option’s price or premium resulting from a change in the underlying asset

Gamma:
Gamma measures delta’s rate of change over time, as well as the rate of change in the underlying asset. Gamma helps forecast price moves in the underlying asset.

Vega:
Vega measures the risk of changes in implied volatility or the forward-looking expected volatility of the underlying asset price.

theta:
theta measures its price decay as time passes.

rho:
represents the rate of change between an option’s value and a 1% change in the interest rates. This measures sensitivity to interest rates.

value at risk
definition:
the minimal loss given the significant level
the maximize loss give the confident level

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3
Q

quantitative measures

A

scenario risk measures
definition:
provides an estimate of the impact on portfolio value of a set of significant change in multiple risk factors
historical scenario approach:
use a set of change that occurred in the past in risk factors
hypothetical scenario approach:
use a set of hypothetical change in risk factors, not actually occurred in the past

stress test: examine the impact on portfolio of a scenario of extreme changes of risk factors

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4
Q

key classes of risk

financial risk

A

market risk
definition: the risk that changes market prices and rates reduce the value of a securities or a portfolio
category:
interest rate risk (interest rate rise, value of bond decrease)
equity price risk
foreign exchange risk:
because of unhedged or not fully hedge foreign currency positions
commodity price risk:
Because of trading liquidity increase the volatility of commodity price

credit risk
definition: the risk of an economic loss from a failure of a counterparty to fulfilled its contractual obligation, or from the increase risk of default during the term of the transaction

category:
default risk:
debtor’s incapacity or refusal to meet debt obligation
bankruptcy risk:
take over the collateralized, or escrowed assets, of a defaulted borrowed or counterparty
downgrade risk:
perceived creditworthiness of borrower or counterparty might deteriorate
settlement risk:
due to the exchange of cash flow when a transaction is settled.

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5
Q

non-financial risk

A
operational risk 
category:
inadequate computer systems
insufficient internal control 
management failure 
model risk
fraud 
human error 
natural disaster

liquidity risk:
1. funding liquidity risk: related to the firm’s ability to raise the cash to roll over its debt to meet cash / margin requirement/collateral requirement
trading/market liquidity risk: because of temporarily lack of counterparty to transact, the institution will not able to execute a transaction at prevailing marking price

legal and regulation risk
legal risk: the counterparty use the provider firm to avoid meeting its obligation
regulation risk: the potential risk of a change in laws and regulation to the market entity

business risk: the influence to the demand, price, and cost of business

strategic risk: the risk of significant investments for which there is a high uncertainty about success and profitability

reputation risk:
fulfill its promises to the counterparty/creditors
whether is fair dealer and follow ethical practices or not

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6
Q

corporate risk management: a primer

cons and pros of hedging

A

disadvantages
under MM theory is useless for company
distract its core business
Zero-sum game that has no long-term increase on firm’s cash flow
specialized skills, infrastructure and process supporting
a flaw risk management strategy can drag a firm down more quickly
compliance cost 合规成本

advantages
reduce cost of capital by reducing the volatility of cash flow
good hedging indicate a good risk management
better control of economic performance
may cheaper than insurance
may offer synergies with operations of the firm

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7
Q

process of hedging

A

step 1: determined the objective: risk appetite

risk appetite: the firm’s tolerance, especially its wiliness to accept risk

the role of board of directors to determine whether to hedge specific risk factor

  1. set out objectives in a clear and executive directives
  2. set the criteria in advance
  3. declare to hedge accounting profits or economic profits, short-term profit or long-term profit
  4. clarity the time horizon

how to do?
determined risk appetite by board of directors
details request:
communicate with management and set the firm’s risk appetite
ensure consistency between risk appetite with business strategy
consider potential conflict between debt holders and shareholders

step 2 mapping the risks

step 3: choosing the instruments for risk management

step 4: constructing and implementing a strategy

step 5: performance evaluate

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8
Q

corporate government and risk management

Best practice in corporate government

A

page 7
the objectives: provides the framework within an organization
minimize and manage the conflicting interests

核心主体: board of director

  1. keep independent from the management
  2. looks after the interest of all stakeholders
  3. develops the clear business strategy and are transparent to stakeholders
  4. be careful of potential agency risks
  5. consider the introduction of the chief risk officer (CRO)

Best practices in risk management

  1. demand substance over form
  2. promote a robust risk management process
  3. set up an ethics committee and establish
  4. make sure that the way staff are rewarded and compensated is based on risk-adjusted performance and is adjusted with shareholders’ interests
  5. approves all major transaction after ensure the transactions are within risk appetite and consistent with the firm’s overall business strategy
  6. set up a risk committee that separate from audit committee (at least one board member in both committees)
  7. risk management plan aligns risk with business strategy
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9
Q

mechanisms of risk Governance

A

risk management committee
responsibility
1. identify, measure, and monitor financial risk
2. approved credit facilities that are above certain limits or within limits but above a specific threshold
3. monitor the composition of the bank’s lending and investment portfolios

audit committee
requirement:
to be financially literate
independent but productive with management
responsibility:
the accuracy of the financial and regulatory reporting;
ensure that the firms compiles with minimum or best practices standards

compensation committee
requirement:
make incentive compensation based on long-term interest and risk-adjusted return;
stock based compensation;
keep independent of management 

risk adversary director
definition:
board member and a risk specialist who attend risk committee nd audit committee to provide for firm
detail advice:
risk appetites and risk management policies;
internal controls, financial statements and disclosures;
the firm’s related parties and related parties transactions;
periodic risk management report and any audit reports
best practices of corporate government and risk management for industry

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10
Q

enterprise risk management (ERM)

A

definition:
a comprehensive and integrated framework for managing key risks in order to achieve business objectives, minimize unexpected earnings volatility, maximum firm value

integration 体现在三方面
a integrated risk organization;
integrated of risk transfer strategy;
integrated of risk management into business processes

benefits and cost 
benefits:
increased  organization effectiveness;
better risk reporting 
improved business performance 
cost:
ERM implies multi-year initiative that requires ongoing senior management sponsorship 
component 
summary: components of ERM
1. corporate government
establish to-down risk management
2. line management
business strategy alignment 
3. portfolio management 
think and act like a "fund manager"
4. risk transfer 
transfer out concentrated or inefficient risk 
5. risk analytic 
develop advanced analytical tool 
6. data and technology resources 
integrate data and system capacity 
7. stakeholder management 
improve risk transparency for key stakeholders
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11
Q

CRO

A

definition:
the CRO is a senior executives who will sponsor a major program to establish an ERM approach

responsibility:
overall leadership, vision and direction for ERM;
estimate the integrated risk management framework;
develop risk management policy;
implement risk indicators and reports;
allocated economic capital and optimizing risk portfolio;
communicate risk profile to the key stakeholders ;
develop analytical, systems and data management capabilities

reporting:

  1. typically CRO report to CEO/CFO and have a dotted line with board or risk committee
  2. The dotted line can changed into the solid between extreme situation
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12
Q

risk management, government, culture, and risk taking in bank

A

optimal level of risk for bank
bank with more of deposit franchise prefer a higher rating;
bank that enter into long-term derivatives contracts might a higher rating;
risky bank 比如投行 prefer a lower rating that deposit bank
图像描述 page 11

risk management for bank 
the approach to increase bank value:
1.incremental value exceeds fixed cost
2. manage risk using ERM but not by single unit 
challenge and limits 
1. risk measurement technology limitations 
2. hedging limitations
3. risk taking incentive limitations 
4. VaR metrics limitations
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13
Q

Government, incentive structure and risk culture

A

the difficult of bank government:
data limitation
nature of business is different
strong government doesn’t necessary lead to good performance

incentive structure:

requirement:
1. set reward of management contribution to entire organization but not units alone
2. reward based on risk-adjusted basis

a strong culture
benefit: consistency and less variability on performance

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14
Q

principle of effective data aggregation and risk reporting

A

risk data aggregation
definition: defining, gathering and processing risk data to enable the bank to measure its performance against it tolerance/appetite

benefit:
better anticipation of problem
easier to identify steps to return to financial health
improve resolvability in term of bank stress or failure
increase probability

principle:
overarching government and infrastructure:
1. strong government
2. data architecture and IT infrastructure

risk data aggregation capabilities:
1. accuracy and integrity: generate accurate and reliable risk data
2. completeness: capture and aggregate all material risk data
3. timeless: it depends on: the nature and potential volatility, critically of overall risk profile, bank-specific frequency requirements
4. adaptability: generate aggregate risk data to meet on-demand, ad hoc risk reporting request:
request during stress / crisis situation; request due to changing internal needs; request to meet supervisory queries

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15
Q

risk reporting

A

definition: the right information represented to the right people at the right time

principle:
1. accuracy
2. comprehensive: cover all material risk areas
3. clarity and usefulness: easy to understand and comprehensive to facilitate informed decision-making;
meaningful information tailored to the needs of the recipients
4. frequency: requirement: the needs of recipients, the nature of risk reported, the speed that risk change, the importance of reports, increase during stress/crisis period
5. distribution: distributed to relevant parties while ensuring confidentiality

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16
Q

the standard capital asset pricing model (CAPM)

A

modern portfolio theory
assumption:
1. based one the mean-variance theory
2. each investment can be measured by expected return and risk
3. investor make their decision only based on expected return, standard deviation and correlation
4. utility maximization
5. risk averse

measurements of return and risk 
average return (arithmetic return): R = (R1 + ... + Rn) / n
variance & standard deviation: 1. for population (the population size) 2. for sample (the degree of freedom)
utility theory page 14
utility function:
U = E(R) - 1/2 x A x sigma^2
when A>0, risk averse 
when A = 0, risk neutral 
when A < 0, risk seeking
A is a measure of risk aversion 

indifference curve 无差异曲线
同一条曲线上效用相同
随着sigma增加,效用降低

formulas of portfolio with two risky assets page 15
Return: Rp = w1R1 + w2R2
Risk (sigma):
Sigma(p) = sqirt(w1^2R1^2 + w2^2R2^2+2w1w2Cov(R1,R2)) = sqirt(w1^2R1^2 + w2^2R2^2+2w1w2p1,2std1*std2)
covariance
correlation (Px,y rx,y)

the relationship of return and risk of portfolio with all risky assets:
the lowest risk given a certain return
the highest return given the certain level of risk
page 15 图

optimal portfolio selection
select the tangent point of indifference curve to efficient frontier or seeking the most satisfaction (utility)

capital market theory
capital market line (CML)
CML is the tangent to the efficient frontier at a point representing market portfolio:
1. the portfolio on CML line is efficient
2. Point indicate lending portfolio, while point B indicated borrowing portfolio
3. point M indicate the market portfolio which includes all the risky assets that weights based on the market value of each market value of each asset

equation of CML
E(Rp) = Rf + (E(Rm) - Rf)/std(market) x std(portfolio)
CML is a special CAL the includes all possible combinations of risk-free asset and market portfolio

17
Q

capital asset pricing model

A

the component of risk
1. systematic risk (non-diversifiable risk or market risk):
cannot be avoid and is inherent in the overall market
can be reward for bearing systematic risk
2. unsystematic risk (firm-specific risk)
can be reduced or eliminated by holding well-diversified portfolio
can not be reward for bearing systematic risk

beta:
property:
1. systematic can be measure by beta of the asset
2. measure how sensitive an asset’s return to the market as a whole

formula
betai = Cov(Ri, Rm)/var(market) = pi,m x std(i)/std(m)
betam = 1

assumptions of CAPM

  1. can make decision solely in terms of expected value and standard deviations of the returns of their portfolios
  2. investor plan for the same single holding portfolio
  3. all investment are infinitely divisible
  4. market are frictionless, including no transaction cost and no taxes
  5. short sale is allowed unlimitedly
  6. unlimited lending and borrowing at the riskless rate
  7. investor have homogeneous of expectation and beliefs
  8. An individual cannot affect the asset price by buying or selling action (price taker)
  9. all assets, including human capital, are tradable

the component of CAPM
表达式:security market line (SML)
公式:E[Ri] = Rf + betai*[E(Rm-Rf)]

evaluate price:
property price plots on SML(A)
Overpriced plots below SML(B)
Underpriced plots above SML(C)

CML vs SML
definition:
CML: all efficient portfolio 
SML: all properly priced asset or portfolio 
X-axis:
CML: Total risk (sigma)
SML: Systematic risk (beta)
Slope:
CML: market portfolio Sharpe ratio 
SML: market risk premium 
Application:
CML: used for asset application
SML: used for security selection
18
Q

applying the CAPM to performance

performance measurement

A

Sharpe ratio

definition: the ratio of means excess return to the standard deviation of return
formula: Sharpe ratio = (E(Rp) - Rf)/std(p)
diagram: the slop of CAL page 20

Treynor ratio
definition: the ratio of mean excess return on portfolio P to the beta of return on portfolio P
formula:
Treynor ratio = (E(Rp)-Rf)/beta(p)

digram: the slop of SML

Jensen’s alpha
definition: the difference between actual return and required to compensate for systematic risk (CAPM)
Formula:
alpha(p) = Rp - [Rf + (Rm - Rf)]

Sortino ratio page 21
appropriate far a case where return are not symmetric
definition:
the ratio of portfolio return in excess of minimum acceptable return to the semi-standard deviation

Semi-deviation is an alternative measurement to standard deviation or variance. However, unlike those measures, semi-deviation looks only at negative price fluctuations. Thus, semi-deviation is most often used to evaluate the downside risk of an investment.

formula:
Sortino ratio (SOR)
SOR = (Rp - Rmin)/sqirt(MSDmin)
MSDmin = sum((Rp - Rmin)^2)/N   Rp <= avg
如果考试的时候Rmin没有给出,就用Rf代替

tracking error
definition: the standard deviation of return difference between the portfolio and the benchmark
TE = var(Rp - Rb)

information ratio
definition: the residual return of the managed portfolio relative to its benchmark divided by the tracking error

comparison
Sharpe ratio vs. Treynor ratio vs Jenson’s alpha

Sharpe ratio :
risk used: total risk
source: portfolio theory
usage:
1. ranking portfolio with different levels of risk
2. not very well-diversified portfolio
3. portfolio that constitute an individual’s total personal wealth

Treynor ratio
risk used: systematic risk
source: CAPM
usage:
1. ranking portfolios with different levels of risk
2. well-diversified portfolios
3. portfolio that constitute part of an individual personal wealth

Jenson's alpha
risk used: systematic risk 
source: CAPM
usage:
ranking portfolios with the same beta
19
Q

arbitrage pricing theory and multifactor models of risk and return

A

arbitrage pricing theory (ATP)
ATP
definition: a linear model with multiple systematic rick factors

assumption:

  1. the portfolios have been well-diversified to diversity;
  2. no arbitrage chance
  3. the expected return can be described by a factor model

formula:
E(Rp) = Rf +betap,1(factor 1) +…+ betap,k(factor k)
betap,j = the sensitive of portfolio to factor j
factor j =the factor risk premium for factor j
pure factor portfolio: sensitive 1 to factor j and sensitive of 0 to all other factors

CAPM vs. APT
CAPM is the special case of APT
CAPM: the exposure is determined by only one systematic risk factor(market risk)
APT: the exposure is determined by one and more systematic risk factor

Fama-French
definition: incorporates the systematic factors of market index, firm size (market capitalization) and book-to-market ratio
formula:
Ri - Rf = ai + Betai,m x (Rm - Rf) + Betai,smb x SMB + Betai,hml x HML + ei
SMB: Small minus Big, size premium
HML: High minus low, value premium
ai = the residual systematic return of asset i after controlling the three factors
ei = firm-specific (non-systematic) return for stock i
Ri = total return of a stock or portfolio i
Rm = total market portfolio return
beta = factor coefficient

multi-factor model
definition: measure asset return and manage exposure to the systematic risk

if there is just one risky and systematic factor —> single factor model
Ri = E(Ri) + betai x F + ei

if there are more that on risky and systematic factor —>mult-factor formula
Ri = E(Ri) + betai,1 x F1 +…+ betai,k x Fk + ei
Fj: the deviation of factor j from its expected value
ei: frim-specific (non-systematic) return for stock i

ATP vs. multiple-factor model
APT describe the expected value return, while the multi-factor model describe the real return
APT describe the well-diversified to diversify away the non-systematic risk , while the multiple-factor model consider the firm-specific risk

20
Q

Financial disasters

A

disaster due misleading reporting (operational risk)

  1. Chase Manhattan &Drysdale securities : page 25

key points
Drysdale — obtained unsecured borrowing — not pay back the borrowing & bankruptcy
Chase Manhattan —- Absorbed almost all losses as the broker

failure factors 
both responsible :
Drysdale: obtained unsecured borrowing by misleading reporting 
Chase Manhattan:
inexperienced manager 
legal document 

lessons learned
the securities industry: compute collateral value more precise on bonds borrowing
firms: need prior approval in contemplating new products offering

Kidder Peabody page 26
key points
entered trades that incorrectly reported exploiting the firm’s accounting system
artificially inflating reported profits
not resulted loss & triggered confidence loss
kidder war sold then dismantled

failure factor:
a flaw that fail to take into account the present value of forward in computer system for government bond trading;
the profit will dissipate when the forward is at maturity

lessons learned:
investigate large unexpected profits
periodically review models and systems

Baring page 26
key points
the large loss in unauthorized activities
two strategies:
1. short straddles on Nikkei 225 [short call + short put]
2. arbitrage trading on Nikkei 225 futures contracts [buy lower price of futures in one exchange and sell it at higher price in another exchange]

failure factors
Nike Leeson —- the dual role as head as head of trading and back office —— decide the strategy hide the loss
the management —– the political power struggles —-fail to inquire the unexpected and the large margin

lessons learned
absolutely necessity of independent trading back office
inquire the unexpected large profit / loss and anticipated movement of cash

Allied Irish Bank (AIB) page 26
key point 
large naked position 
imaginary trades to offset the real trades 
persuade back-office not to check 

failure factors
back office fail to confirm all trades because of being convinced
suspicious trades and trading profits are ignored
AIB’s management was so inexperienced and too reliance on Rusnak

lessons learned
avoid engaging in small venture in which firms lacks any depth of expertise —– too much reliance one knowledge and probability of a single individual
many lessons learned same as Baring

Union bank of Switzerland (UBS) page 27
key points
1. loss due to the poor internal control
2. loss again due to the large position in LTCM

failure factors
the dual role violated independent risk oversight

lessons learned
independent risk oversight

Societe Generate page 28
key points
large, unauthorized positions
fake transactions that offset actual positions
canceled fake trades before confirming
the large reported loss damaged bark’s reputation
required to raise new capital

failure factor
No confirmation before cancelling
trading system was only set up to evaluate net position instead of net position and gross position —— usually high brokerage commissions should be a warning signs
the poor reporting system for collateral accounts
the violation of vacation policy
the lack of proper supervision
the inaction of the assistant to report activity

21
Q

disaster due to large market moves (market risk)

A

long term capital management
key points
1. highly secretive about investment portfolio
2. every investment decision was made together
3. focus on long term investment strategies
4. required the investments to be hold for long time horizon
5. the three strategy: relative value, credit spreads, and equity volatility

failure factors:
valuation or traded models are flawed [model risk]:
1. historical data pattern will repeat
2. extreme events were independent over time
3. tail risk was underestimated

all strategies based on mean-reverting
lack diversification subject to market risk

metallgesellschaft (MGRM)
key points
offer forward contract to customer —- long-term futures to hedge
forward settled at expiration, while future settled daily

failure factors
1. oil price decrease: future loss increase —- loss realized immediately, forward gain increase —- gain will realized for years
so, cash outflow
2. German accounting method — show realized loss but not unrealized gain, cause the credit rating decrease, more collateral to counterparty
3. the market shifted from backwardation [spot price > future price] to contango [spot price < future price]
4. too large size of position caused trading liquidity risk

22
Q

disaster due to the conduct of customer business (customer service)

A

banker trust page 30
banker’s trust
key points
PG&Gibson greeting turn to banker’s trust to reduce funding cost ———-> too complex to understand and compare with other ——-> two companies suffer huge losses and sued Banker’s trust ——> phone conversation show that they fool them and manipulate the price quotes —–> the scandal damaged Bank’s Turst’s reputation nd Bank’s trust was dismantled

JP Morgan, City group and Enron
key points
Aid defunct energy trading to disguise loan and to defraud investors —–> Charged by SEC was fined SEC指控被罚款

23
Q

deciphering the liquidity and Credit Crunch 2007 - 2008

A

the housing bubble page 31
key factors
low interest rate — the reason: 1. large capital from Asian countries to U.S. 2. adopted a lax interest rate

originate and distribute via securitization

securitization process
lending institution (originator) sell and repackages and transfer risk to investors —- cannot eliminate the risk but redistribute risk
During securitization:
House buyer receive money by mortgage to bank A (Sponsor). Bank A receive money by mortgage to Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV). SPV receive money by providing Mortgage-Backed Security (MBS) to MBS investors
after securitization:
house buyer pay money to SPV, and SPV pay money to MBS investor

structuring

consequences:
cheap credit and lending standard fell —– housing frenzy
pipeline risk

E.g. CDO (Collateralized debt obligation)

first step —- from a diversified portfolio
next step —- slice portfolios into different tranches based on risk appetite (senior tranche, mezzanine tranche, equity tranche)

collateralized debt obligation (Cont.)
SPV pool include corporate bonds, mortgages, other assets)
capital structure percentage from SPV pool to tranches
80 in A, 10 in B, 7 in C, 3 in D.
Senior: A (Aaa, AAA)
Mezzanine: B (A1, A+), C(B1, B+), D

CDS(credit default swap)
buyer make cash payment & seller provide protection against credit loss

reference asset —-> principle and interest payment —–> protection buyer ——-> make a deal with protection seller —— premium or CDS spread (to seller), payment if default (to buyer)

24
Q

the liquidity and credit crunch

A

liquidity risk
loss spiral: a loss spiral arises for leveraged investors because a decline in the value of assets erodes then investor’s net worth much faster than their gross worth and the amount that they can borrow fall
杠杆投资者的损失螺旋上升,因为资产价值的下降侵蚀了投资者的净资产,其净资产的速度远远超过其总资产的价值,并且他们可以借入的金额下降

margin/haircut spiral: margin/haircut spiral spike mess of large price drops, and the investor has to seeven more because the investor needs to reduce its leverage ratio, which increase margins further and force more sale
保证金/理发螺旋状钉刺,价格大幅下跌,投资者不得不采取更多措施,因为投资者需要降低其杠杆比率,从而进一步提高利润率并迫使销售增加

asset-liability maturity mismatch
dry-up in funding liquidity

network effects
interwoven network of financial obligation

consequences:
mortgage default increase —> ABS decrease, loss increase ——> ABS tranche become illiquid
flight to quality to safe haven —-> credit spread become widen
difficult to get loans from bank
loss incurred in mortgage originators
suffer worst recession since 1930s

25
Q

getting up to speed on the financial crisis: a one-weekend-reader’s guide

A

the crisis build page 34
historical background
banking crisis play an accelerator broader crises
changes in credit supply are strong predictor of financial crisis

vulnerabilities for the crisis
shadow banks
financial entities other than regulated depository institution that serve as intermediaries to channel saving into investment
the source of key vulnerabilities that led to financial crisis

key vulnerabilities
repurchase agreement (Repo):
depositor (lender) puts money in banks and bank pay repo rate
banks provides collateral that depositor take procession of.
haircut: the difference between the market value of the collateral and the deposited money
asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP):
financial long-term assets
short-term securities
Roll over to refinance
the above three are majority of ABCP held by MMFs
large capital inflows to U.S. to store of value

trigger for the crisis:
loss on the subprime mortgage

26
Q

the panic and policy responses

A

two main panic period
period 1: august 2007 (ABCP panics)—-ABCP suffer a ‘run’ unwilling to refinance CP when it is due; rely on backup support from sponsor or forced to sell assets; many MMFs required “bail-out” from sponsors (stake decrease, then Yield increase; sell underlying assets to place downward presure)
period 2: Sep-Oct. 2008 (Lehman bankruptcy)—-Lehman Brother went bankruptcy —- major shock to MMFs; Repo market—-haircut index sharply rose

policy responses and their efficacy功效
central bank 
monetary policy:
interest rate change ---- rate decrease ---- no evidence of positive   effect 
liquidity support: (positive effects in period. while no effect in later period)
lower reserve requirements 
longer funding term 
more auctions
higher credit lines 

government
financial sector stabilization measures
1. recapitalization —- capital injection —– positive effect in later period
2. enhance depositor protection; debt guarantee; government; —- show week result
3. asset purchases —–asset purchases; provision of liquidity for bad assets; “ring-fencing” with toxic assets; asset guarantee —– show week result

real effect of financial crisis
cut back on credit supply —- cut back on expenditure on dividend; employee decline; drew down credit lines; bypassed attractive investment

risk management failure
a large loss is not equal to risk management failure———– risk management does not prevent loss

six types:

  1. failure to identity risk —- ignore risk event though risk is known; not capture by model even thought know the risks; realization of a truly unknown risk
  2. mismeasurement of know risks —- wrong return distribution; correlation may be mismeasured
  3. failure in communicating the risk to management —– provide timely information
  4. failure in monitoring risks
  5. failure in managing risks
  6. failure to use appropriate risk metrics
27
Q

GAPP code of conduct

A

violating the GAPP code of conduct:

  1. temporary suspension or permanence removal from GAPP’s membership roles
  2. temporary or permanently removing the right of designation or GAPP granted designation

principle:
1. professional integrity and ethical conduct —– act as honest, integrity, and competence; avoid disguised contrivance 职业诚信和道德操守—–表现为诚实,正直和能力; 避免伪装

  1. conflicts of interest —- can’t knowingly involve conflict unless full disclosure has been provided; if conflict are available, should commit to full disclosure and management 利益冲突—-除非有充分披露,否则不得有意识地涉及冲突; 如果存在冲突,应致力于全面披露和管理
  2. confidentially —– take all reasonable precautionary measures to prevent intentional and unintentional disclosure of confidential information 机密—–采取一切合理的预防措施,以防止有意和无意地泄露机密信息

principle —– 协会具体要求——- rules of conduct
1. professional integrity and ethical conduct:
integrity; independent and objectivity; reasonable precautions; not misrepresent; mindful of culture differences and higher standard
2. conflict of interest —- act fairly and fully disclosure any conflict to matters
3. confidentially —– can’t make use of confidential information unless having prior consent; can’t confidential information to benefit personally

general accepted practices:
diligence/independent/objectivity
familiar with risk management
ensure factual data and not contain false information
make a distinction between fact and opinion